Why Are You Here Chanting "Jai Shri Ram"? The Contradictions of Diaspora Hindutva A procession winds through a street in Melbourne. A rally fills a park in Edison, New Jersey. A stadium in Auckland rises to its feet. The chant is the same everywhere: Jai Shri Ram. In India over the past decade, this invocation of Ram has been remade from a devotional greeting into the war cry of Hindu majoritarianism, shouted at lynchings, painted on bulldozers, hurled at Muslims as a demand for submission. Underneath the footage circulating online, a local commenter reaches for the oldest line in the nativist playbook: if you love India so much, why are you here? Why don't you go back? The question is racist. It casts the Brown immigrant as a perpetual outsider, welcome to write code and pay taxes but never to belong, and it carries a particular hypocrisy in settler colonies such as the United States, Canada, Australia, and Aotearoa New Zealand, nations built on the dispossession of ...
The Margins Review · Culture-Centered Approach
The culture-centred blog of Mohan J. Dutta — Massey University, Aotearoa. Home of The Margins Review: critical intellectual opinions from Aotearoa to the world.