Several books that I have edited within the last couple of years are now being published. The latest one is
Journey of a Konkani Family.
If you're looking for an objective book review, you won't find it here,
because I consider it an honor to have worked on the book and like it
quite a bit. What you will find here, though, are reasons to pick up the
book yourself.
Author Mulki Radhakrishna Bhat, a Konkani from Udupi on the west coast
of Karnataka, grew up in India as part of a large, close family with
rich cultural traditions. He immigrated to the United States as a young
adult in the 1950s, navigated its very different cultural traditions,
and had a long career as a nuclear physicist. He is now retired from
Brookhaven National Laboratory.
He and his wife, Padma, who live on Long Island in New York, have one
son, whose questions inspired him to tell the story of several
generations of his family within the context of the Indian diaspora.
Mulki spent more than a decade doing research in the United States and
in India, interviewing many members of his extended family, and then
writing the book. And such an engrossing story it is, one that is
liberally sprinkled with transliterated Sanskrit* and that explains many
traditions. Here is a portion from appendix 5 about the
traditions involved in naming babies:
There are
elaborate rules for choosing a baby’s name that are based on the time of
birth or on astrology and local customs (Kane 1974, 2:234–55; Pandey
1969, 78–85). The customs and traditions of names have changed
significantly from the Vedic age to the present. Some of these are
discussed in Appendix 3: “Atri Gotra, or Clan Atri.” The current
orthodox [Gauda Sarasvat Brahmana] custom is to give five names: one
based on the family deity, one on the month in which the baby was born,
one on the baby’s asterism, a secret name, and a customary name for
daily use. The secret name is known only to the parents until the age of
initiation and is whispered in the baby’s ear. The secrecy is to
prevent its use by any malefactor who would perform sorcery to harm the
baby. Parents have to remember the secret name, which is revealed at the
time of the upanayana. The custom of using twelve names at a barso
is not required by codes of law and has grown to be a tradition in some
families. Boys used to be named after their paternal grandfather,
whether that ancestor was alive or dead. Nowadays, some of these names
are considered old-fashioned and other more modern names are used. There
is much greater freedom in choosing a name for a girl. Usually, girls
are named after a flower, a desirable virtue, or one of the exemplary
women of Hindu epics.
Having roots in both the traditional Konkani world and the modern
American world, Mulki tells the humorous tale in chapter 5 of his first
encounter with American football, the U.S. religion, as part of an
orientation for Indian immigrants:
Ohio State
University (OSU), founded in 1870 as a land-grant university, had about
20,000 students when I joined in 1956. After being admitted for the fall
semester, all of the foreign students gathered in a huge hall to get a
general introduction to university life. ...
Football at OSU was not just a collegiate sport; it was the
religion, with all of the attendant rituals. Out of curiosity, I bought a
season ticket the first year to find out what all of the fuss was
about. Attendance at a couple of games left me totally unmoved. All I
could make out of the action was that there were two groups of huge men
who looked like gorillas in armor, and they fought for the possession of
one football. Somehow all of the nuances of the game were lost on me. I
decided that attending games was a waste of time, so I gave away my
ticket to the first person who asked for it. The OSU Buckeyes were
almost professional football players masquerading as students, according
to some critics. The weekly highlight of the religious observance was
the Saturday afternoon football game, in which the powerhouse Buckeyes
usually annihilated any opposing team, to no one’s surprise. Every OSU
victory was celebrated by the ringing of the Victory Bell (a gift of the
classes of 1943, 1944, and 1954), weighing 2,420 pounds and residing
150 feet from the ground on the ramparts of the southeast tower of the
OSU stadium, to announce to the faithful another triumph of good over
evil. The believers claimed that on a clear day,the bell could be heard
five miles away. The whole university, including all of its libraries,
closed down for Saturday-afternoon home games. When a few of us
requested that the university’s main library be kept open on Saturday
afternoons, this “heretical depravity” caused quite a stir. The
university did open the library, but this grave anomaly was not
publicized. The Buckeyes’ archenemy was another football powerhouse—the
University of Michigan Wolverines, at Ann Arbor, Michigan. The
OSU–Michigan game, which usually ended the football season, was a drama
of cosmic proportions—the ultimate battle between good and evil. Over
the years, this game had acquired its own mythology, saga, and portion
of the faithful. Presiding over all of these observances was the head
football coach, Wayne Woodrow “Woody” Hayes (1913–1987), now of blessed
memory, a cult hero elevated to the semidivine status of guru by
university alumni and the residents of Columbus. For most of the alumni,
these games were the most important things that ever happened to them
during their university years. Any other skills or knowledge they picked
up was incidental or unintentional. I learned this from a letter I got
from the OSU Alumni Association Club of New York City inviting me, as an
alumnus, to attend one of their collegial meetings where movies of past
Buckeye victories were to be shown, and of course they would all end
with the joyous ringing of the Victory Bell and the singing of the
Buckeyes’ fight song. These alumni wanted to savor every moment of past
football victories, once more with feeling. It was truly an amazing bit
of juvenile nostalgia. Unfortunately, as a nonbeliever in all rituals, I
had to pass up this happy occasion.
Beyond the tales of his own experiences, Mulki recounts and discusses
how events in history affected his family and the culture of his
ancestors, making it clear that people are not that different from each
other, wherever they may live.
I was fortunate to work with three colleagues on
Journey.
Stephen Tiano handled book design and layout;
Dick Margulis handled book production, publication, and marketing; and
Venkatesh Krishnamoorthy proofread the book.
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*Because the license that I purchased to use the transliteration
typeface does not extend to being able to use it in this blog post, I
have further transliterated the Sanskrit words in the book excerpts I
have quoted here, using one of the typefaces available to me through
Blogger.
cultural memoir Indian diaspora author EditorMom