Thursday, July 03, 2014

Happy Anniversary. Happy Birthday. Happy Me!

In 1957
(A repost, slightly modified, from the past)

Right from when I was a kid—a long time ago in India—I was familiar with the importance of the Fourth of July in the United States because of a family connection: my parents lost their freedom when they got married on the very day that Americans celebrate their independence day.

So, yes, anniversary greetings to my parents.

I left the old country behind years ago.  After gaining American citizenship, the Fourth of July is, of course, way too special for me.

Perhaps it is a typical immigrant emotion after all when I think that my adopted country is special because I consciously weighed the alternatives and worked to come to America. The American citizenship was not an accidental birthright.  It was not an ovarian lottery that I won.

Immigrating to America or any other country is so easy now unlike a few generations ago when most of the world’s population stayed at, or close to, the places where they were born and raised.  We humans are now seemingly on the move all the time. We move from one region to another within a country, and migrate across international borders, to strange places where they might speak strange languages and eat strange foods.  The surroundings.are alien to us. As a student remarked last term, it is amazing that humans give up everything known and familiar and go somewhere far away.  Yet, we move.  Because, moving is better than staying put.

Grandfather, during his final year at college
In our family, many, many decades ago, my grandfather too had an opportunity to move away, when he was offered a job in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) because of his valued metallurgy qualifications from a reputed Indian university.

If grandfather had sailed on that ship, my family’s history would have taken a different turn.  I might not even be blogging this for you to read.

However, he was compelled to reject that offer and stay back in India.

My grandmother and great-aunt always got excited to narrate this story.  Grandfather had no choice but to reject the offer.  Not because the job did not pay enough--the offer was apparently a phenomenal one. But, his mother, who was deeply rooted in the traditions, threatened to commit suicide if he went too far away from her!

The distance was not all that much either.  Grandfather's hometown, Sengottai, and Ceylon’s capital city, Colombo, are not even 250 miles apart. But, 250 miles in the days before telephone and planes and emails!  Grandfather's mother had justifiable reasons to worry.  He then ended up taking a job that was relatively close by.  A job for which he was tremendously overqualified.  A dutiful family man he was.

The grad student in Los Angeles
In contrast to that, a few decades later, I traveled half-way around the world, in order to be here in the US.  20,000 kilometers!

In an interesting coincidence, I left India on its independence day--August 15th.  I gained my independence the very day when they were celebrating in the old country the anniversary of the end of the British Raj and the beginning of self-rule :)

America has been home since the day I landed in Los Angeles, and more northward migration since.  To quote from the musical, West Side Story, “I like to be in America, okay by me in America.”

Looking forward to going back home!

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