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Like Singh, Nankani is frequently asked questions about her culture and religion
-- are Hindus really polytheistic? (Yes, but all the Hindu gods are really one.) Does she eat meat? (No.) Does she celebrate Thanksgiving? (Yes
-- she's an American citizen.) "I've been to multiple dinners where the entire two hours is us being asked all these questions," she said. "It can get difficult ... it does feel like a load sometimes." But Abhi Tripathi, an aerospace engineer in Houston and co-founder of the Indian blog
http://www.sepiamutiny.com/, said he gets fewer questions than he used to. "I feel like the general level of knowledge of Indian culture has started to gradually rise," said Tripathi, who was born in California to Indian immigrants. Schandra Singh, an artist born in New York to an Indian father and Austrian mother, says her experiences are in some ways unusual because she does not appear to be Indian. Sometimes when she walks unnoticed past an Indian family on the street, she thinks they would acknowledge her if her features looked different.
"It's weird, because it's sort of like living in a shell," Singh said. But differences -- like Savannah's pierced nose -- are part of what make the world interesting, she said. "Are we all trying to look alike? Is that what makes a better student, a better school?" Singh asked. "Or a better country?" "Those young people who invest in their ethnic backgrounds," she said, "seem to actually do more with their lives than less." ___ On the Net: Sandhya Nankani's blog: http://www.literarysafari.com/
[Associated
Press;
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