5 Embarrassingly Ignorant Questions That All Indian-Americans Have Been Asked
Like
many of my peers, growing up as an Indian American can feel like a lot
of different things: switching between accents lest you end up sounding
like a bad Aziz Ansari imitation, feeling like you don’t belong at times
because you’re always so torn between different social circles, and
dealing with the rampant ignorance present in modern society towards
Indians. Here are some of the craziest, and sadly most common, questions
I have had the misfortune of answering.
“Do you speak Indian?”
Ok, let’s think about this for a second:
does that even remotely make sense? India is a subcontinent of Asia and
has 28 states with a whopping population of approximately 1.6 billion
people. Even though there are only about 21 officially recognized
languages, there are close to 1,700 dialects and “mother tongues”. So
that would be just as stupid as me going up to someone saying “uh,
excuse me, but do you speak American?”
“So like, no, where are you REALLY from?”
Even though I was born in India and moved
to this country when I was pretty young, there are hundreds of thousands
of Indians born in the U.S. on a daily basis. So when my friend who has
lived in Columbus her whole life gets asked “But seriously though,
where are you originally from?” and she answers with “MUTHAF*CKIN
COLUMBUS”, don’t blame her if she gets crazy eyes.
“So like, are you going to have, like, an arranged marriage?”
I blame Bollywood and their gradual
advance on the Western hemisphere for this one. Though it is
stereotypically more common to witness Indian parents being more strict
when it comes to dating and relationships, ultimately this becomes a
parenting rule: it depends on how your parents raised you and with which
beliefs they try to uphold in their household. This can be true for
Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, hell even Zoroastrians! And with the
growing rate of Tindr and eHarmony who needs shaadi.com?!
“Does everyone get to ride elephants at Indian weddings?”
I am sure it is common knowledge that
Indian weddings are popular for their vibrancy, color, grandeur, and
lavish pomposity with a week-long stretch of parties and celebrations
leading up to the final wedding ceremony. In any case, I’m pretty sure
if each guest were to have their own elephant, then we would need a
direct tap into the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation but for now the
bride and groom may pick their beast of choice.
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