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Suburban Sahibs: Three Immigrant Families and Their Passage from India to America
Suburban Sahibs Three Immigrant Families and Their Passage from India to America Author:S. Mitra Kalita "As shapely as fiction and as timely as this mornings newspaper, this book is an informative one to read for pleasure."New York Times "Suburban Sahibs is a wonderfully crafted story of the personal struggles and victories of three immigrant families from South Asia living in the New Jersey suburbs. Amazingly, what emerges through th... more »e prism of their narratives is a much broader portrait of life in America today."Bill Bradley, U.S. senator from New Jersey, 19791996 Winner of the Celebration of Immigrant Voices Award from the International Institute of New Jersey and the 2004 New Jersey Authors Award from the New Jersey Studies Academic Alliance and New Jersey Library Association. From movie theaters showing the songs and gyrations of "Bollywood" to valedictorians named Patel and Shah, signs are everywhere that Middlesex County, New Jersey is home to one of the largest Indian populations in the world outside India. By tracing the migration of three families, this book delves into how immigration has altered the American suburb, and how the suburb, in turn, has altered the immigrant. In this updated edition, journalist S. Mitra Kalita shows that although the reception from long-time residents has not been entirely welcoming, Indians have come to achieve economic success and their desire for political and social parity continues to grow stronger. She traces the evolution of the suburb from a destination for new arrivals to a launching pad for them. In the late nineteenth century, tourists descended upon Edison to gawk at its Christmas lights displays. Today, thousands of Indians from all over the United States arrive in the same bedroom community to celebrate their own festivals of lights and colors. Suburban Sahibs attempts to answer the question of how and why they arrived, and offers a window into what America has become: a nation of suburbs as well as a nation of immigrants.« less