Tag Archives: Diwali

Nasa sends Indians Diwali greetings with image of ‘celestial festival of lights’ – IndiaTimes

  1. Nasa sends Indians Diwali greetings with image of ‘celestial festival of lights’ IndiaTimes
  2. NASA Extends Diwali Wishes With Star-Studded Image of a Globular Cluster Clicked by Hubble | Weather.com The Weather Channel
  3. NASA Shares Stunning Image Of ”Celestial Festival Of Lights” Captured By Hubble NDTV
  4. Nasa extends Diwali greetings with unique globular cluster containing old and new stars | Mint Mint
  5. NASA extends Diwali greetings with picture of ‘celestial festival of lights’ The Assam Tribune
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Alia-Ranbir to Deepika-Ranveer: Bollywood couples’ priceless Diwali photos – IndiaTimes

  1. Alia-Ranbir to Deepika-Ranveer: Bollywood couples’ priceless Diwali photos IndiaTimes
  2. Katrina Kaif, Vicky Kaushal hold hands as their families join them for Diwali Hindustan Times
  3. Bhagyashree gives peek into Shilpa Shetty’s Diwali party ft. Raveena Randon, Tamannaah Bhatia PINKVILLA
  4. Diwali 2023: Ajay Devgn-Kajol, Saif Ali Khan-Sara Ali Khan, Karisma Kapoor-Kareena Kapoor Khan, Katrina Kaif-Vicky Kaushal and more celebs share photos from their festivities Bollywood Hungama
  5. Shahid-Mira, Sushmita-Rohman Lead Celeb Roll Call At Shilpa Shetty’s Grand Diwali Bash NDTV Movies
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Alia Bhatt stops Ranbir Kapoor for a quick photo session at Kareena Kapoor-Saif Ali Khan’s Diwali bash, see pics and videos – The Indian Express

  1. Alia Bhatt stops Ranbir Kapoor for a quick photo session at Kareena Kapoor-Saif Ali Khan’s Diwali bash, see pics and videos The Indian Express
  2. Alia Bhatt, ‘sasuma’ Neetu pose at Kareena Kapoor’s Diwali bash; Saif Ali Khan, Ranbir, Sara-Ibrahim join PINKVILLA
  3. Alia Bhatt, Ranbir Kapoor, Sara Ali Khan, Karisma Kapoor, Randhir Kapoor, Aadar Jain with his new girlfri IndiaTimes
  4. Kareena Kapoor’s Diwali Bash: From Karisma, Sharmila To Sara-Ibrahim, Celebs Who Graced The Party BollywoodShaadis.com
  5. ‘Perfect family picture’: Inside Kareena Kapoor Khan’s Diwali celebration with Saif Ali Khan, Taimur and Jeh PINKVILLA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Diwali 2023: Madhuri Dixit’s party selfie with Ananya Panday, Aditya Roy Kapur, Katrina Kaif, Vicky Kaush – timesofindia.com

  1. Diwali 2023: Madhuri Dixit’s party selfie with Ananya Panday, Aditya Roy Kapur, Katrina Kaif, Vicky Kaush timesofindia.com
  2. Sara Ali Khan Illuminates the Night: A Glittering Diwali Celebration | Oneindia News Oneindia News
  3. Shah Rukh Khan arrives in style at Amritpal Singh’s Diwali bash; Suhana Khan dazzles in golden attire: WATCH PINKVILLA
  4. Ananya Panday, Aditya Roy Kapur, Kriti Sanon, Viya Balan, Jeetendra: Celebs attend Ekta Kapoor’s Diwali b timesofindia.com
  5. This Diwali, channel Orry’s style through his phone cases The Indian Express
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Ananya Panday, Aditya Roy Kapur, Kriti Sanon, Viya Balan, Jeetendra: Celebs attend Ekta Kapoor’s Diwali b – IndiaTimes

  1. Ananya Panday, Aditya Roy Kapur, Kriti Sanon, Viya Balan, Jeetendra: Celebs attend Ekta Kapoor’s Diwali b IndiaTimes
  2. Inside Pics From Sara Ali Khan’s Diwali Party Featuring Amrita Singh, Bindiya Dutta NDTV
  3. Ananya Panday, Aditya Roy Kapur, Kriti Sanon, Shanaya Kapoor, and others grace Ektaa Kapoor’s Diwali bash; WATCH PINKVILLA
  4. Shilpa Shetty-Raj Kundra Twin In Black For Ektaa Kapoor’s Diwali Bash, Disha Patani Joins In A Saree BollywoodShaadis.com
  5. Kiara decks up in red, joins Sidharth, Vicky, Katrina, Madhuri for a Diwali bash Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Katrina looks enchanting in lehenga, Salman turns up in jeans at Diwali party – Hindustan Times

  1. Katrina looks enchanting in lehenga, Salman turns up in jeans at Diwali party Hindustan Times
  2. Did Salman Khan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan hug at Manish Malhotra’s Diwali party? VIRAL PIC timesofindia.com
  3. Evergreen Actress Rekha wears gorgeous Banarasi saree, steals all the limelight at a Diwali bash Times of India
  4. A Student Of The Year Reunion For Sidharth Malhotra And Varun Dhawan At Ramesh Taurani’s Diwali Party NDTV Movies
  5. Agastya Nanda fuels dating rumours as he escorts Suhana Khan to her car after Diwali party – WATCH timesofindia.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Did Salman Khan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan hug at Manish Malhotra’s Diwali party? VIRAL PIC – IndiaTimes

  1. Did Salman Khan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan hug at Manish Malhotra’s Diwali party? VIRAL PIC IndiaTimes
  2. Evergreen Actress Rekha wears gorgeous Banarasi saree, steals all the limelight at a Diwali bash Times of India
  3. Tauranis of TIPS banner to host a grand Diwali bash tonight, to be attended by the big names of Bollywood Bollywood Hungama
  4. Katrina Kaif, Sidharth Malhotra, Pooja Hegde and others make heads turn with their stylish outfits at Ram IndiaTimes
  5. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan turns heads with her solo appearance at Manish Malhotra’s Diwali party; netizen says ‘Hope all is well with Abhishek Bachchan’ Times of India
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Manish Malhotra’s Diwali party: Rekha, Aditya Roy Kapur, Ananya Panday, Nita Ambani, Janhvi Kapoor attend. Who wore what – Hindustan Times

  1. Manish Malhotra’s Diwali party: Rekha, Aditya Roy Kapur, Ananya Panday, Nita Ambani, Janhvi Kapoor attend. Who wore what Hindustan Times
  2. Salman Khan, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Gauri Khan Lead Celeb Roll Call At Manish Malhotra’s Diwali Party NDTV
  3. Sidharth Malhotra-Kiara Advani, Shahid Kapoor-Mira Rajput, Rekha, Kriti Sanon & more: Celebs at Manish Ma IndiaTimes
  4. Aishwarya, Salman, Kiara, Sidharth attend Manish Malhotra’s Diwali bash Hindustan Times
  5. Janhvi Kapoor-Shikhar Pahariya are all smiles; Vijay Varma-Tamannaah Bhatia hold hands after Diwali 2023 bash PINKVILLA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Asian faiths try to save swastika symbol corrupted by Hitler

Sheetal Deo was shocked when she got a letter from her Queens apartment building’s co-op board calling her Diwali decoration “offensive” and demanding she take it down.

“My decoration said ‘Happy Diwali’ and had a swastika on it,” said Deo, a physician, who was celebrating the Hindu festival of lights.

The equilateral cross with its legs bent at right angles is a millennia-old sacred symbol in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism that represents peace and good fortune, and was also used widely by Indigenous people worldwide in a similar vein.

But in the West, this symbol is often equated to Adolf Hitler’s hakenkreuz or the hooked cross – a symbol of hate that evokes the trauma of the Holocaust and the horrors of Nazi Germany. White supremacists, neo-Nazi groups and vandals have continued to use Hitler’s symbol to stoke fear and hate.

Over the past decade, as the Asian diaspora has grown in North America, the call to reclaim the swastika as a sacred symbol has become louder. These minority faith communities are being joined by Native American elders whose ancestors have long used the symbol as part of healing rituals.

Deo believes she and people of other faiths should not have to sacrifice or apologize for a sacred symbol simply because it is often conflated with its tainted version.

“To me, that’s intolerable,” she said.

Yet to others, the idea that the swastika could be redeemed is unthinkable.

Holocaust survivors in particular could be re-traumatized when they see the symbol, said Shelley Rood Wernick, managing director of the Jewish Federations of North America’s Center on Holocaust Survivor Care.

“One of the hallmarks of trauma is that it shatters a person’s sense of safety,” said Wernick, whose grandparents met at a displaced persons’ camp in Austria after World War II. “The swastika was a representation of the concept that stood for the annihilation of an entire people.”

For her grandparents and the elderly survivors she serves, Wernick said, the symbol is the physical representation of the horrors they experienced.

“I recognize the swastika as a symbol of hate.”

New York-based Steven Heller, a design historian and author of “Swastika: Symbol Beyond Redemption?”, said the swastika is “a charged symbol for so many whose loved ones were criminally and brutally murdered.” Heller’s great-grandfather perished during the Holocaust.

“A rose by any other name is a rose,” he said. “In the end it’s how a symbol affects you visually and emotionally. For many, it creates a visceral impact and that’s a fact.”

___

The symbol itself dates back to prehistoric times. The word “swastika” has Sanskrit roots and means “the mark of well being.” It has been used in prayers of the Rig Veda, the oldest of Hindu scriptures. In Buddhism, the symbol is known as “manji” and signifies the Buddha’s footsteps. It is used to mark the location of Buddhist temples. In China it’s called Wàn, and denotes the universe or the manifestation and creativity of God. The swastika is carved into the Jains’ emblem representing the four types of birth an embodied soul might attain until it is eventually liberated from the cycle of birth and death. In the Zoroastrian faith, it represents the four elements – water, fire, air and earth.

In India, the ubiquitous symbol can be seen on thresholds, drawn with vermillion and turmeric, and displayed on shop doors, vehicles, food packaging and at festivals or special occasions. Elsewhere, it has been found in the Roman catacombs, ruins in Greece and Iran, and in Ethiopian and Spanish churches.

The swastika also was a Native American symbol used by many southwestern tribes, particularly the Navajo and Hopi. To the Navajo, it represented a whirling log, a sacred image used in healing rituals and sand paintings. Swastika motifs can be found in items carbon-dated to 15,000 years ago on display at the National Museum of the History of Ukraine as well as on artifacts recovered from the ruins of the ancient Indus Valley civilizations that flourished between 2600 and 1900 BC.

The symbol was revived during the 19th century excavations in the ancient city of Troy by German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann, who connected it to a shared Aryan culture across Europe and Asia. Historians believe it is this notion that made the symbol appealing to nationalist groups in Germany including the Nazi Party, which adopted it in 1920.

In North America, in the early 20th century, swastikas made their way into ceramic tiles, architectural features, military insignia, team logos, government buildings and marketing campaigns. Coca-Cola issued a swastika pendant. Carlsberg beer bottles came etched with swastikas. The Boy Scouts handed out badges with the symbol until 1940.

___

The Rev. T.K. Nakagaki said he was shocked when he first heard the swastika referred to as a “universal symbol of evil” at an interfaith conference. The New York-based Buddhist priest, who was ordained in the 750-year-old Jodoshinshu tradition of Japanese Buddhism, says when he hears the word “swastika” or “manji,” he thinks of a Buddhist temple because that is what it represents in Japan where he grew up.

“You cannot call it a symbol of evil or (deny) other facts that have existed for hundreds of years, just because of Hitler,” he said.

In his 2018 book titled “The Buddhist Swastika and Hitler’s Cross: Rescuing a Symbol of Peace from the Forces of Hate,” Nakagaki posits that Hitler referred to the symbol as the hooked cross or hakenkreuz. Nakagaki’s research also shows the symbol was called the hakenkreuz in U.S. newspapers until the early 1930s, when the word swastika replaced it.

Nakagaki believes more dialogue is needed even though it will be uncomfortable.

“This is peace work, too,” he said.

___

The Coalition of Hindus of North America is one of several faith groups leading the effort to differentiate the swastika from the hakenkreuz. They supported a new California law that criminalizes the public display of the hakenkreuz — making an exception for the sacred swastika.

Pushpita Prasad, a spokesperson for the Hindu group, called it a victory, but said the legislation unfortunately labels both Hitler’s symbol and the sacred one as swastikas.

This is “not just an esoteric battle,” Prasad said, but an issue with real-life consequences for immigrant communities, whose members have resorted to self-censoring.

Vikas Jain, a Cleveland physician, said he and his wife hid images containing the symbol when their children’s friends visited because “they wouldn’t know the difference.” Jain says he stands in solidarity with the Jewish community, but is sad that he cannot freely practice his Jain faith “because of this lack of understanding.”

He noted that the global Jain emblem has a swastika in it, but the U.S. Jain community deliberately removed it from its seal. Jain wishes people would differentiate between their symbol of peace and Hitler’s swastika just as they do with the hateful burning cross symbol and Christianity’s sacred crucifix.

___

Before World War II, the name “Swastika” was so popular in North America it was used to mark numerous locations. Swastika Park, a housing subdivision in Miami, was created in 1917, and still has that name. In 2020, the hamlet of Swastika, nestled in the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York, decided to keep its name after town councilors determined that it predated WWII and referred to the prosperity symbol.

Swastika Acres, the name of a Denver housing subdivision, can be traced to the Denver Swastika Land Company. It was founded in 1908, and changed its name to Old Cherry Hills in 2019 after a unanimous city council vote. In September, the town council in Puslinch, Ontario, voted to change the name of the street Swastika Trail to Holly Trail.

Next month, the Oregon Geographic Names Board, which supervises the naming of geographic features within the state, is set to vote to rename Swastika Mountain, a 4,197-foot butte in the Umpqua National Forest. Kerry Tymchuk, executive director of the Oregon Historical Society, said although its name can only be found on a map, it made news in January when two stranded hikers were rescued from the mountain.

“A Eugene resident saw that news report and asked why on earth was this mountain called that in this day and age,” said Tymchuk. He said the mountain got its name in the 1900s from a neighboring ranch whose owner branded his cattle with the swastika.

Tymchuk said the names board is set to rename Mount Swastika as Mount Halo after Chief Halito, who led the Yoncalla Kalapuya tribe in the 1800s.

“Most people we’ve heard from associate it with Nazism,” Tymchuk said.

___

For the Navajo people, the symbol, shaped like a swirl, represents the universe and life, said Patricia Anne Davis, an elder of the Choctaw and Dineh nations.

“It was a spiritual, esoteric symbol that was woven into the Navajo rugs, until Hitler took something good and beautiful and made it twisted,” she said.

In the early 20th century, traders encouraged Native artists to use it on their crafts; it appeared often on silver work, textiles and pottery. But after it became a Nazi symbol, representatives from the Hopi, Navajo, Apache and Tohono O’odham tribes signed a proclamation in 1940 banning its use.

Davis views the original symbol that was used by many Indigenous people as one of peace, healing and goodness.

“I understand the wounds and trauma that Jewish people experience when they see that symbol,” she said. “All I can do is affirm its true meaning — the one that never changed across cultures, languages and history. It’s time to restore the authentic meaning of that symbol.”

___

Like Nakagaki, Jeff Kelman, a New Hampshire-based Holocaust historian, believes the hakenkreuz and swastika were distinct. Kelman who takes this message to Jewish communities, is optimistic about the symbol’s redemption because he sees his message resonating with many in his community, including Holocaust survivors.

“When they learn an Indian girl could be named Swastika and she could be harassed in school, they understand how they should see these as two separate symbols,” he said. “No one in the Jewish community wants to see Hitler’s legacy continue to harm people.”

Greta Elbogen, an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor whose grandmother and cousins were killed at Auschwitz, says she was surprised to learn about the symbol’s sacred past. Elbogen was born in 1938 when the Nazis forcibly annexed Austria. She went into hiding with relatives in Hungary, immigrated to the U.S. in 1956 and became a social worker.

This new knowledge about the swastika, Elbogen said, feels liberating; she no longer fears a symbol that was used to terrorize.

“Hearing that the swastika is beautiful and sacred to so many people is a blessing,” she said. “It’s time to let go of the past and look to the future.”

___

For many, the swastika evokes a visceral reaction unlike any other, said Mark Pitcavage, senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism who for the past 22 years has maintained the group’s hate symbols database.

“The only symbol that would even come close to the swastika is the symbol of a hooded Klansman,” he said.

The ADL explains the sanctity of the swastika in many faiths and cultures, and there are other lesser-known religious symbols that must be similarly contextualized, Pitcavage said. One is the Celtic cross – a traditional Christian symbol used for religious purposes and to symbolize Irish pride – which is used by a number of white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups.

Similarly, Thor’s hammer is an important symbol for those who follow neo-Norse religions such as Asatru. But white supremacists have adopted it as well, often creating racist versions of the hammer by incorporating hate symbols such as Hitler’s hakenkreuz.

“In the case of the swastika, Hitler polluted a symbol that was used innocuously in a variety of contexts,” Pitcavage said. “Because that meaning has become so entrenched in the West, while I believe it is possible to create some awareness, I don’t think that its association with the Nazis can be completely eliminated.”

___

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Read original article here

Sunak’s wealth and right-wing politics mean he is far from representative, British Asians say


London
CNN
 — 

Orange and pink fireworks colored the skies over south London on Monday, as members of the local South Asian community celebrated Diwali.

This year, the holiday aligned with Rishi Sunak, 42, becoming Britain’s first prime minister of Indian descent, as Hindus like him celebrated the festival of lights.

Sunak’s rise to power has split opinion among South Asians in the UK. Some believe his historic appointment is a moment of pride and sign of social progress in Britain, while others point to his immense wealth, privately educated background and adoption of hard right-wing policies.

Evidence of this wide range of views was clear when CNN spoke to South Asians in the London neighborhood of Tooting – home to a bustling migrant community within the British capital.

Flamboyant fabric shops, places of worship and food vendors offering syrupy Indian desserts alongside fresh fruits and vegetables line the streets, with family-run convenience stores dotting nearly every corner.

The London suburb is steeped in the richly diverse heritage of its residents, where people of color comprise over half of the population, according to the 2011 UK census.

The same data found that nearly 30% of people in Tooting identify as “Asian” or “Asian British,” and after English, Urdu and Gujarati are among the most common languages spoken.

“I think it’s a good thing and especially auspicious on the day of Diwali, for him to be appointed,” Raj Singh, a Punjabi-Sikh member of the Khalsa Centre, a local Sikh temple, told CNN.

“It is a sign of progress, but only at the top. Rishi Sunak comes from a very privileged background,” the 58-year-old solicitor said, his glasses tucked behind his bright orange turban.

Singh said he believed Sunak’s ascent is a sign that only South Asian politicians with immense social and economic privilege can “break the glass ceiling.”

Earlier this year, Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty, the daughter of an Indian billionaire, appeared on the Sunday Times Rich List of the UK’s 250 wealthiest people. The newspaper estimated their joint net worth at £730 million ($826 million).

Sunak received a flurry of congratulations from other politicians of South Asian heritage, including former Conservative cabinet minister Sajid Javid and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who is in the opposition Labour Party. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi also sent Sunak “special Diwali wishes,” calling him a “bridge” between the two countries.

Outside the capital, Sanjay Chandarana, who heads a Hindu temple in Southampton, southern England, co-founded by Sunak’s grandparents in 1971, told CNN that Sunak’s elevation was “a Barack Obama moment” for the UK, in a nod to America’s first Black president.

“I think it’s something of importance to the South Asian community … seeing that he is the first South Asian prime minister of the UK. It’s something that I think all South Asians should be proud of,” Irtaza Nasir, a 24-year-old restaurant director in Tooting, said. “I never thought this day would come.”

Anil Shah, a garrulous 75-year-old Hindu Gujarati shopkeeper, said Sunak’s leadership “proves that we have Indians who are clever enough to do the job.”

However, Nilufar Ahmed, a psychologist at the University of Bristol in western England, said Sunak’s leadership is “nuanced and complex,” and cautioned the limits of racial representation at the highest rungs of British politics.

“I think that there was something quite lovely about his appointment coming alongside Diwali. I think that was really meaningful for many South Asians to have that,” she said.

“But I also think that it’s too simplistic to see Rishi Sunak as symbolic of a South Asian community in the UK. This is a man that has had lots of privilege and so he isn’t as representative as some of the discourse around representation is presenting him to be.”

Ahmed said she remains cynical about comparisons between Sunak and Obama’s premiership, citing the absence of a mandate from the general population in Britain.

Sunak was appointed prime minister, replacing Liz Truss, after his lone remaining rival Penny Mordaunt dropped out of the Conservative Party leadership contest. He is the third British prime minister in seven weeks, with his premiership sparking calls from across the political spectrum for a general election.

“Rishi Sunak was not even elected by his own party, let alone by the UK population. And so there will be a resistance in the population against Sunak being appointed. He will not be seen as somebody who perhaps represents the membership or the voters of the Conservative Party,” Ahmed commented.

She added that his premiership could “play out in quite worrying ways,” citing a viral video in which a Conservative party member launched racist criticism against Sunak and told LBC Radio that he “doesn’t love England” and “isn’t even British in most people’s opinion.”

Sunak was born in the coastal city of Southampton and is a British citizen.

For Lubeena Yar, a 56-year-old entrepreneur based in Tooting, Sunak’s appointment “was circumstantial.”

“Conservatives are Conservatives. I don’t think it really matters what color their skin is,” the 56-year-old reflected as she sat on a plush pink chair inside her Pakistani clothes store.

Yar said she did not align with Sunak’s Conservative Party values, but added that she identified with the sacrifices his parents made in migrating to the UK from East Africa in the 1960s.

She recalled that when her parents first came from Pakistan to the UK in the same period, her father was turned away from homeowning opportunities because racist neighbors would say they did not want a person of color living on their street.

“I’ve grown up in that era. And, you know, I remember what my life was or what my parents had to sacrifice so we could get a good education, get our degrees and do what we wanted to. Our parents weren’t from that privileged background, but they made it for us.”

Sunak has inherited myriad challenges as the UK’s new leader, namely the task of steering the country out of a grueling cost-of-living crisis and calming financial markets in the wake of Truss’ short and chaotic premiership.

However, Sunak is also partially responsible for the economic turmoil suffocating the UK.

While serving as the UK’s former finance minister under Boris Johnson’s government, he installed measures worth £400 billion ($452 billion) aimed at strengthening the economy, including a generous furlough scheme, business loans and concessions on eating in restaurants. But that stimulus came at a sizeable cost and left the government struggling to find savings.

He has pledged to bring “stability and unity” to the Conservatives by appealing to multiple factions of the party, which has seen deepening divisions since the 2016 Brexit vote.

He has historically voted to support stronger enforcement of immigration and asylum rules and opposed measures to prevent climate change and promote equality and human rights. Like his predecessor, Sunak promised a tough approach to illegal immigration and vowed to expand the government’s controversial Rwanda immigration policy.

Further north, in the Scottish city of Glasgow, Fariya Sharif, said she failed to see Sunak’s leadership as a sign of equality.

“Rishi Sunak’s appointment makes me feel deflated and devastated at the chaos of the Tories continuing to badly rule our country, especially another PM that wasn’t elected by everyday people,” the 30-year-old Muslim Pakistani chef said by email.

“I don’t see this as racial progress. I see this as tokenism from the Tories trying to push their agenda on wealthier immigrant communities … it encourages an environment where brown people are only accepted if they follow the same harsh rules on immigration and economics.”

Sunak’s premiership has sparked a debate among many British Asians that lies at the intersection of race, class and politics.

The new prime minister has entered Downing Street as one of its richest ever occupants, yet he has the task of leading a country where marginalized communities are falling deeper into poverty in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

During his time as chancellor of the exchequer, Sunak was criticized for proposing a negligible 1% pay rise to staff for Britain’s National Health Service, despite the institution crumbling under government cuts and staff shortages.

Rina Patel, a Hindu Gujarati doctor who works at St. Helier Hospital in south London, said she has “really mixed views” about Sunak’s premiership.

“In terms of representing people, I don’t feel that he can represent the poorest people in our society. And as a doctor in the NHS, I see some of the poorest people in our society that are struggling,” the 43-year-old said against the backdrop of a local jeweler.

“In terms of the fact that he is intelligent, has a finance background, I think he will do better than what’s gone before, but that’s no compliment,” Patel added. “I don’t think he represents me.”

“What I see in Rishi Sunak’s, first and foremost … is an incredibly privileged person with enormous wealth and with access to education and resources that the majority of South Asians in the UK do not have. And so, I have far more in common with working-class White politicians than I do with Rishi Sunak,” Ahmed mused.

Sunak may be the first British prime minister with Indian heritage, but his race alone does not qualify him to represent the diverse and nuanced views of the 4.2 million people with South Asian heritage who live in Britain today.

“Seeing someone brown becoming prime minister is something to be proud of, and yet it is also possible to vehemently disagree with the politics or the individual,” Jasvir Singh, a barrister and co-founder of South Asian Heritage Month, wrote by email.

“Politics is much, much more than just about color and race.”



Read original article here