MY AMERICA
BY R.K.Narayan
At the American Consulates the visa issuing
section is kept busy nowadays as more and more young men seek the Green
Card or profess to go on a studen visa and many try to extend their stay
once they get in.The official handles a difficult task while filtering
out the "permanents" and letting in only the "transients".The average American
himself is liberal-minded and doesn't bother that more Indian engineers
and doctors are swamping the opportunities available in the country
possibly to the disadvantage of the American candidate himself.I discussed
the subject with Prof.Ainslee Embree of Columbia University who has
had a long association with Indian affairs and culture.His reply was noteworthy.
"Why not Indians as well?In course of time they will be Americans.The American
citizen of today was once an expatriate, a foreigner who had come out of
a European or African country.Why not from India too?We certainly love
to have Indians in our country." There are however, two views on this subject.The
elderly parents of Indians settled in America pay a visit to them, from
time to time (on excursion round ticket), and feel pleased at the prosperity
of their sons or daughters in America. After a Greyhound tour of
the country and a visit to Niagara, they are ready to return home when
the suburban existence begins to bore them whether at New Jersey,or The
Queens or the Silicon Valley neighborhood of California.But they always
say on their return, "After all our boys are happy there.Why should they
come back to this country, where they get no encouragement?"
EXASPERATION
Our young man who goes out to the States
for higher studies or training,declares when leaving home,"I will come
back as soon as I complete my course,may be two years or a little more,but
I will definitely come back and work for our country,and also help our
family....." Excellent intentions,but it will not work that way.Later when
he returns home full of dreams, projects, and plans, he only finds hurdles
at every turn when he tries for a job or to start an enterprise of
his own.Form-filling, bureaucracy, caste and other restrictions, and a
generally feudal style of functioning, exasperate the young man and
waste his time.He frets and fumes as days pass with nothing achieved, while
he has been running around presenting or collecting papers at various
places.
He is not used to this sort of treatment
in America, where, he claims,he could walk into the office of the top man
anywhere,address him by his first name and explain his purpose;when
he attempts to visit a man of similar rank in India to discuss his ideas,
he realizes that he has no access to him, but can only talk to subordinate
officials in a hierarchy.Some years ago a biochemist returning home and
bursting with proposals,was curtly told off by the big man when he innocently
pushed the door and stepped in."You should not come to me directly, send
your papers through proper channels." Thereafter the young
biochemist left India once for all.having kept his retreat open with the
help of a sympathetic professor at the American end.In this respect American
democratic habits have rather spoilt our young men.They have no patience
with our official style or tempo,whereas an Indian at home would accept
the hurdles as inevitable Karma.The America-returned Indian expects special
treatment,forgetting the fact that over here chancellors of universities
will see only the other chancellors, and top executives will see only other
top executives and none less under any circumstance. Our administrative
machinery is slow, tedious, and feudal in its operation, probably still
based on what they called the Tottenham Manual, creation of a British administrator
five decades ago.
LACK OF OPENINGS
One other reason for a young man's final
retreat from India could also be attributed to the lack of
openings for his particular qualification.A young engineer trained in robotics
had to spend all his hours explaining what it means, to his prospective
sponsors, until he realized that there could be no place for robots in
an over-crowded country.The Indian in America is a rather lonely being,
having lost his roots in one place and not grown them in the other.Few
Indians in America make any attempt to integrate in American cultural or
social life.So few visit an American home or a theater or an opera,
or try to understand the American psyche.An Indian's contact with the American
is confined to his colleagues working along with him and to an official
or seminar luncheon.He may also mutter a "Hi!" across the fence to an
American neighbor while lawn-mowing.At other times one never sees the other
except by appointment,each family being boxed up in their homes securely
behind locked doors.After he has equipped his new home with the latest
dish-washer, video,etc., with two cars in the garage and acquired all that
the others have,he sits back with his family counting his blessings.Outwardly
happy,but secretly gnawed by some vague discontent and aware of some inner
turbulence or vacuum,he cannot define which. All the comfort
is physically satisfying, he has immense "job satisfaction" and that
is about all.
ENNUI
On a week-end he drives his family fifty
miles or more towards another Indian family to eat an Indian dinner, discuss
Indian politics, or tax problems(for doctors particularly this is
a constant topic of conversation, being in the highest income bracket).There
is monotony in this pattern of life.so mechanical and standardized. In
this individual, India has lost an intellectual or an expert; but it must
not be forgotten that the expert has lost India too,which is a more
serious loss in the final reckoning.The quality of life in India is different.
In spite of all its deficiencies, irritations, lack of material comforts
and amenities, and general confusion, Indian life
builds up an inner strength.It is through subtle inexplicable
influences (through religion,family ties,and human relationships in general).Let
us call them psychological "inputs" to use a modern terminology, which
cumulatively sustain and lend variety and richness to existence.
Building imposing Indian temples in America, installing our gods
therein and importing Indian priests to perform the puja and festivals,
are only imitative of Indian existence and could have only a limited
value.Social and religious assemblies at the temples(in America) might
mitigate boredom but only temporarily.I have lived as a guest for
extended periods in many Indian homes in America and have noticed the ennui
that descends on a family when they are stuck at home.Children growing
up in America present a special problem.They have to develop themselves
on a shallow foundation without a cultural basis, either Indian or American.Such
children are ignorant of India and without the gentleness and courtesy
and respect for parents, which forms the basic training for a child in
an Indian home,unlike the American upbringing whereby
a child is left alone to discover for himself the right code of conduct.Aware
of his child's ignorance of Indian life,the Indian parent tries
to cram into the child's little head all possible information during an
'Excursion Fare'trip to the mother country.
DIFFERING EMPHASIS
In the final analysis America and India
differ basically,though it would be wonderful if they could complement
each other's values.Indian philosophy lays stress on austerity and unencumbered,
uncomplicated day-to-day living.On the other hand, America's emphasis is
on material acquisitions and a limitless pursuit of prosperity.From childhood
an Indian is brought up on the notion that austerity and a contended life
is good.and also a certain other- worldliness is inculcated through the
tales a grandmother narrates, the discourses at the temple hall, and through
moral books.The American temperament,on the contrary,is pragmatic.
INDIFFERENCE TO ETERNITY
The American has a robust indifference
to eternity."Visit the church on a Sunday and listen to the sermon
if you like but don't bother about the future," he seems to say.Also, "dead
yesterday and unborn tomorrow,why fret about them if today
be sweet?" - he seems to echoOmar Khayyam's philosophy.He works hard and
earnestly, and acquires wealth,and enjoys life.He has no time to worry
about the after-life; he only takes the precaution to draw up a proper
will and trusts the Funeral Home around the corner to take care of the
rest.The Indian who is not able to live on this basis holeheartedly,finds
himself in a half-way house;he is unable to overcome the inherited complexes
while physically flourishing on the American soil.One may hope that the
next generation of Indians (American-grown) will do better by accepting
the American climate spontaneously or in the alternative return to India
to live a different life.
R. K. NARAYAN
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