Why Are
So Many Young Indian Students In Their Early Twenties Dying in the US?
Why are so
many young Indian students in their early twenties dying in the US? The tally
is nine so far in the three months of 2024 alone. Is it an outbreak of racism
extended to the brown Indian student? Are they quite thoroughly unwelcome in
America? If so, why do their Indian parents send them there in droves and at
enormous expense? The expatriate Indian student community is the largest in the
US and bigger than that of the Chinese.
Normally it
is the American, Caribbean, and African black people subjected to murderous
racist attacks, if one can call such savagery normal. The Black Lives Matter
movement is a testament to the fact that rampant racism involving some
institutions and the police departments persists in America.
To prevent
violent attacks against Indian students and other Indians, [Gautam Mu1] the current Biden administration is committed to provide adequate
security, both on and off campus, and in the community at large.
But do some
Indian students put themselves in harm’s way by flouting cautionary advisories
on dangerous areas?
Four Indian
students have been done to death in a period of two weeks according to a news
report date-lined 2nd February 2024. They were 19 year old Shreyas
Reddy Benigher from the Linder School of Business, Ohio, Neil Acharya of Purdue
University, Vivek Saini from Panchkula in Haryana. The latest is Sameer Kamath,
an Indian-American pursuing his doctorate in mechanical engineering in Purdue
University again.
In addition,
Akul Dhawan was found dead of hypothermia outside the University of Illinois
UIUC in Champaign.
G Dinesh of
Telangana and Nikesh of Andhra Pradesh were found gassed to death in their flat
in Connecticut.
Kuchipudi
and Bharat Natyam dancer Amarnath Ghosh, age 34, was shot to death in St Louis
Missouri.
Paruchuri
Abhijit of Boston University was found dead in his car, making up the 9th
senseless death so far in 2024.
There is at
least one death of an Indian every day across the US says an American Community
leader Mohan Nannapaneni, founder of volunteer based non-profit organisation
TEAM Aid. These are mostly students and H-1B employees who have recently come
to America.
Are some
Indian students lonely and feeling alienated far from home? Do some of them,
unable to fit in socially or cope academically, persist in their studies there
due to societal and parental pressures emanating from back in India? Though
more often than not, Indian students who go to American universities are
exceptionally bright and are there on earned scholarships. But are they mature
and experienced enough in the Western cultural mores and milieu to avoid bullying[Gautam Mu2] and ridicule? Sometimes, there are underlying mental health issues even
amongst the gifted students which are activated by the pressures of academics
and those of fitting in.
There are
also those who die of physical illness and natural causes. Perhaps lack of
seeking timely medical attention in an alien medical system is to blame. Again,
this is a phenomenon that affects foreign students even here in India, because
many tend to neglect themselves in the absence of relatives to keep an eye on
them.
In January
2024, a young girl graduate student Jaahnvi Kandula was run over by a speeding
policeman Officer Kevin Dave in a police car at a street intersection crosswalk
in Seattle. To compound matters, the manslaughter caused by the police car
being driven at 119 kmph was laughed off by another Seattle Police Officer
Daniel Auderer, who said Kandula’s life had ‘limited value’. He dismissed the proposition that officer Dave was at
fault and that a criminal investigation was necessary.
The MEA in
India has said a total of 403 Indian students have died abroad from various
causes since 2018. The largest number of deaths occurred in Canada followed by
Britain.
Several
voices in India are being raised against the necessity of sending Indian
students to study abroad. Perhaps the answer lies in sending them to better
regulated and safer places such as Singapore where the spectre of racism is
largely absent.
It seems
that most of the White world, including Australia and New Zealand has a racist
problem, that their governments are struggling to quell.
The lure of
obtaining lucrative jobs in Europe and America by studying and graduating from
their universities is under pressure now because of economic recession. The
fact that many American corporations already have Indians in prominent
positions or at the top is probably resented by the natives.
Unlike White
immigrants, the Indian, by dint of his or her colour does not blend in. The
Indian also tends to not assimilate into the great American or European melting
pot. Tensions are bound to result.
The answer
may lie, at least in the medium term by setting up US and European university campuses in India and
West Asia. Till then, these are very real risks that Indian students and their
families must face.
As for the
H1 B visa employees, they too must weigh their pros against their cons. Of
course, statistically, these tragic demises are not very large compared to the
masses of students and employees who go to America.
The Indian
diaspora in the West is now in millions after all, and many have found jobs in
local, state and federal government as well as the judiciary and medicine.
Those who
are already European and American citizens must organise to maintain their
security. More so in America, a land where the first amendment allows everyone
to own and use firearms. Nothing works better than a strong response and the
perception that Indians are not timid pushovers.
(930
words)
March 22nd
2024
For
Firstpost/News18.com
Gautam
Mukherjee
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