Hindus now have a fellow believer in Congress
New York, Jan 14: When Dr. Uma Mysorekar looks at the members of the new Congress, the Indian immigrant and practising Hindu can see that, for the first time, there's someone who shares her ethnicity
New York, Jan 14: When Dr. Uma Mysorekar looks at the members of the new Congress, the Indian immigrant and practising Hindu can see that, for the first time, there's someone who shares her ethnicity and someone who shares her faith.
To her surprise, they are two different people.
Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii is the first Hindu elected to Congress.
Rep. Ami Bera of California, also a Democrat, is the third Indian-American to serve in the House of Representatives.
Gabbard, however, isn't from India, where Hinduism originated and to which the vast majority of its adherents have ethnic ties.
Bera is a Unitarian. His two Indian-American predecessors in Congress, Dalip Singh Saund and Bobby Jindal, also were not practising Hindus.
The late Saund, a California Democrat elected in 1956, was Sikh. Jindal, a Republican elected to the House in 2004 and now Louisiana's governor, is Catholic.
Gabbard's presence in Congress creates an interesting moment for Hindus in the United States, a chance to celebrate a barrier broken but also a topic of discussion as they ponder how closely religion and nationality are entwined, or even should be.
Mysorekar is glad to see a practising Hindu in the country's halls of political power, no matter her nationality.
Gabbard "is a Hindu representative, it doesn't matter where she came from," said Mysorekar, president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America, a temple in the New York borough of Queens that is one of the country's oldest.
As a non-Indian Hindu, Gabbard is most definitely an outlier.
According to an analysis issued last month from the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, there are about 1 billion Hindus in the world. Of those, 94 percent are in India, and 99 percent in the larger South Asia region.
The analysis, based on data from 2010, the latest available, estimated the population of Hindus in the United States at 1.79 million. Most are of Indian descent.
Hinduism encompasses a range of beliefs and practices, and there is no formal conversion practice. That acceptance of plurality in the faith, that Hindus come in many forms, would make it "hypocritical" for Indian Hindus to look askance at Gabbard for not sharing their ethnicity, said Smita Kothuri, 38, of McLean, Virginia.
"How can I hold it against her? I'd be untrue to my religion if I held it against her," she said.
Other Indian Hindus agreed with the sentiment.
"I don't think it makes a difference that she's not Indian," said Kinjal Dave, 17, a high school senior in Hillsborough, New Jersey. "I think it's the faith that matters."
The press secretary for Gabbard, a 31-year-old Iraq war veteran, declined an Associated Press request to interview the congresswoman for this story, but sent along a statement Gabbard had made upon being sworn into office, for which she used a copy of the Bhagavad Gita, a Hindu religious text.
"I chose to take the oath of office with my personal copy of the Bhagavad Gita because its teachings have inspired me to be a servant-leader, dedicating my life in the service of others and to my country," she said.
Gabbard has said she was introduced to Hinduism through her mother, and embraced it fully as a teenager.
She also is the first member of Congress to be born in the U.S. territory of American Samoa.
The reception from Indians and Indian media to her electoral victory has been largely positive, although there has been at least one mistaken media report making a reference to Gabbard being Indian-American. (She and her siblings all have Indian first names.)
Having any Hindu representation in Congress breaks barriers in a country that, despite religious freedom being enshrined in the Constitution, has seen its elected officials overwhelmingly come from Christian backgrounds.
It can be an inspiration to other Hindus who are interested in public office, that their faith and most voters' unfamiliarity with it, won't prove insurmountable.
"I think it instills confidence to say there's been a Hindu there," said Suhag Shukla, executive director of the Hindu American Foundation in Washington.
It's also an opportunity to introduce Hinduism as a faith to people who may have seen it as solely the purview of those who have a connection to India.
Dharmasetu Das knows all about that. Born in Massachusetts to a military family, the 55-year-old white man whose original first name was David has been practicing Hinduism for decades.
Now living in San Diego, he performs weddings and other ceremonies as a Hindu pandit, or priest.
He was a teenager when he came across some books on the faith, and "I felt like this was it," he said.
He hasn't come across too many other non-Indian Hindus like himself over the years, and is happy to know he now has a compatriot in such a high-profile place like Congress.
"Just opening people's eyes," he said, "it's a great thing."
To her surprise, they are two different people.
Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii is the first Hindu elected to Congress.
Rep. Ami Bera of California, also a Democrat, is the third Indian-American to serve in the House of Representatives.
Gabbard, however, isn't from India, where Hinduism originated and to which the vast majority of its adherents have ethnic ties.
Bera is a Unitarian. His two Indian-American predecessors in Congress, Dalip Singh Saund and Bobby Jindal, also were not practising Hindus.
The late Saund, a California Democrat elected in 1956, was Sikh. Jindal, a Republican elected to the House in 2004 and now Louisiana's governor, is Catholic.
Gabbard's presence in Congress creates an interesting moment for Hindus in the United States, a chance to celebrate a barrier broken but also a topic of discussion as they ponder how closely religion and nationality are entwined, or even should be.
Mysorekar is glad to see a practising Hindu in the country's halls of political power, no matter her nationality.
Gabbard "is a Hindu representative, it doesn't matter where she came from," said Mysorekar, president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America, a temple in the New York borough of Queens that is one of the country's oldest.
As a non-Indian Hindu, Gabbard is most definitely an outlier.
According to an analysis issued last month from the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, there are about 1 billion Hindus in the world. Of those, 94 percent are in India, and 99 percent in the larger South Asia region.
The analysis, based on data from 2010, the latest available, estimated the population of Hindus in the United States at 1.79 million. Most are of Indian descent.
Hinduism encompasses a range of beliefs and practices, and there is no formal conversion practice. That acceptance of plurality in the faith, that Hindus come in many forms, would make it "hypocritical" for Indian Hindus to look askance at Gabbard for not sharing their ethnicity, said Smita Kothuri, 38, of McLean, Virginia.
"How can I hold it against her? I'd be untrue to my religion if I held it against her," she said.
Other Indian Hindus agreed with the sentiment.
"I don't think it makes a difference that she's not Indian," said Kinjal Dave, 17, a high school senior in Hillsborough, New Jersey. "I think it's the faith that matters."
The press secretary for Gabbard, a 31-year-old Iraq war veteran, declined an Associated Press request to interview the congresswoman for this story, but sent along a statement Gabbard had made upon being sworn into office, for which she used a copy of the Bhagavad Gita, a Hindu religious text.
"I chose to take the oath of office with my personal copy of the Bhagavad Gita because its teachings have inspired me to be a servant-leader, dedicating my life in the service of others and to my country," she said.
Gabbard has said she was introduced to Hinduism through her mother, and embraced it fully as a teenager.
She also is the first member of Congress to be born in the U.S. territory of American Samoa.
The reception from Indians and Indian media to her electoral victory has been largely positive, although there has been at least one mistaken media report making a reference to Gabbard being Indian-American. (She and her siblings all have Indian first names.)
Having any Hindu representation in Congress breaks barriers in a country that, despite religious freedom being enshrined in the Constitution, has seen its elected officials overwhelmingly come from Christian backgrounds.
It can be an inspiration to other Hindus who are interested in public office, that their faith and most voters' unfamiliarity with it, won't prove insurmountable.
"I think it instills confidence to say there's been a Hindu there," said Suhag Shukla, executive director of the Hindu American Foundation in Washington.
It's also an opportunity to introduce Hinduism as a faith to people who may have seen it as solely the purview of those who have a connection to India.
Dharmasetu Das knows all about that. Born in Massachusetts to a military family, the 55-year-old white man whose original first name was David has been practicing Hinduism for decades.
Now living in San Diego, he performs weddings and other ceremonies as a Hindu pandit, or priest.
He was a teenager when he came across some books on the faith, and "I felt like this was it," he said.
He hasn't come across too many other non-Indian Hindus like himself over the years, and is happy to know he now has a compatriot in such a high-profile place like Congress.
"Just opening people's eyes," he said, "it's a great thing."