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Rakshabandhan: East Indian Sister-Brother Bonds


Article # : 14216 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 7 / 1988  3,229 Words
Author : Sheila K. Webster-Jain
Folklorist Sheila K. Webster-Jain teaches in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Maryland, College Park.

       Sisters and brothers are thought in most cultures to be linked to one another by unique bonds, and for most people, to love a friend as a sister or brother is to bestow special affection. Each year, the peoples of northern and central India affirm the sister-brother relationship, whether established through blood or friendship, in a festival known as Rakshabandhan, or Rakhri. And Americans whose roots lie in those parts of India perpetuate the custom in this nation, maintaining links not only between siblings, but between continents, between ways of life, and between new and old.
       
        The East Indian community in the United States currently numbers around half a million, including both foreign-born immigrants and native-born Americans of East Indian descent. The majority of immigrants have arrived since 1965, when U.S. immigration law was altered to eliminate national quotas. Before 1965, only about seventeen thousand East Indians had entered the country, and the history of East Indian immigration from 1820 until 1965 shows fluctuations reflecting official policies as well as social attitudes in the United States.
       
        During the nineteenth century, approximately seven hundred East Indians, most from northern India, entered the United States. Unlike later immigrants to the United States who left their Indian homeland as refugees or for greater employment opportunities, this first group was a mélange of adventurers, merchants, monks, and professionals. The vast majority of early immigrants were male, as immigration restrictions barred men from bringing over their wives and children. In fact, by 1915 fewer than thirty East Indian women had arrived in the United ... (1922 of 19730 Characters)
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