Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Japan’s Supreme Court strikes down sterilization requirement for trans people

The 2003 Japanese law mandates the absence of reproductive organs in order to change one’s gender on official documents.
Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Photo: Shutterstock
Japan’s Supreme Court struck down part of a law requiring transgender people to undergo surgery in order to have their gender legally recognized.

The 2003 Japanese law mandates the absence of reproductive organs in order to change one’s gender on official documents, effectively requiring trans people to undergo surgical sterilization. The country’s Supreme Court ruled in 2019 that the requirement was “constitutional at this moment.”


Japanese court rules surgical requirement to change gender on documents unconstitutional

A similar case before the country’s Supreme Court could set national legal precedent.

But as the Associated Press reports, on Wednesday the court’s 15-judge Grand Bench ruled unanimously that the requirement was unconstitutional. In its decision, the court said that the requirement forces trans people to make the “cruel choice between accepting the sterilization surgery that causes intense bodily invasion and giving up important legal benefits of being treated according to their gender identity.”

However, the Supreme Court’s decision does not address other aspects of the law, which also requires trans people to be diagnosed with gender dysphoria by at least two doctors, undergo gender-affirming surgery, be unmarried, and have no children under 18 to have their gender designation changed on official documents.

The case was brought before the court on behalf of a transgender woman who sought to have her gender changed on her family registry. Two lower courts denied her request in 2019 and 2020.

As the Japan Times reported in September, lawyers for the plaintiff, who has not been named, argued that because she has undergone years of hormone therapy, which has resulted in an “extreme decline” in her reproductive abilities, she meets the law’s requirements without having to undergo surgery. The law’s surgical requirements, they argued, impose significant economic and physical burdens, as well as violating equal rights protections under the Japanese constitution.

According to the AP, the Supreme Court’s decision now sends the plaintiff’s case back to the high court to further examine the law’s broader surgical requirement.

In a statement read by one of her lawyers, the plaintiff said that she was disappointed that the court had not ruled on the broader surgical requirement.

The Supreme Court’s decision comes less than two weeks after a Japanese family court ruled in favor of Gen Suzuki, a 48-year-old transgender man who filed a lawsuit in 2021 seeking to change his gender on official documents without having to undergo gender affirmation surgery. In its decision, which set only a limited precedent, the court agreed with Suzuki’s argument that the 2003 law’s surgical requirements are both inhumane and unconstitutional. The court characterized the law as outdated and counter to efforts to create a more inclusive society amid growing acceptance of gender diversity.

 

Afghanistan ranks lowest on global women’s status index

A group of women attend a protest in Kabul on Oct. 2022. File photo.

Afghanistan finds itself at the very bottom of the rankings among 177 countries in terms of the status of women, as revealed by this year’s Women, Peace and Security (WPS) Index, launched on Tuesday in New York.

Denmark stands atop the 2023 rankings as the best country for women, scoring over three times higher than Afghanistan, which ranks at the lowest position. Yemen secures the second-lowest position, with the Central African Republic occupying the third spot on the global list.

The WPS Index’s fourth edition emphasizes that societies that empower women tend to be more peaceful, democratic, prosperous, and better equipped to confront the challenges posed by climate change.

Published by Georgetown University’s Institute for Women, Peace and Security (GIWPS) and the Centre on Gender, Peace, and Security at the Peace Research Institute Oslo, the WPS Index relies on established data sources to assess women’s inclusion, justice, and security in 177 countries. The Index employs 13 indicators to gauge women’s status, covering various aspects from education and employment to laws and organized violence.

This year, the United States secures the 37th spot, scoring similarly to Slovenia, Bulgaria, and Taiwan within the second quintile.

Elena Ortiz, the lead author of the WPS Index, commented, “With its scores, rankings, and robust data, the WPS Index offers a valuable tool for individuals working on women, peace, and security issues. Policymakers can utilize it to pinpoint areas in need of resources. Academics can study trends within indicators and across regions. Journalists can use it to provide context and perspective to their stories. And activists can employ it to hold governments accountable for their commitments to advancing women’s status.”

All of the countries at the bottom of this year’s Index, the bottom 20, have experienced armed conflicts between 2021 and 2022. In most of these nations, over half of women reside in close proximity to conflict zones.

“Since 2021, Afghanistan has retained the dubious distinction of being the worst place in the world to be a woman. Afghan women wake up each day to a lack of job opportunities, educational opportunities, and autonomy over their lives. This report should serve as a wake-up call to world leaders that a nation of women is in dire straits,” said Torunn L. Tryggestad, Director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo’s Centre for Gender, Peace, and Security.

The WPS Index underscores the inconsistency observed in various countries regarding women’s well-being. For instance, Vietnam ranks 24th in terms of women’s security but ranks 154th in justice for women. The report highlights that there is room for improvement in all countries and helps identify areas where women face disadvantages and require attention.

The fourth edition of the WPS Index also presents a subnational analysis of Colombia, with WPS Index scores calculated at the provincial level. Despite the 2016 Peace Agreement, two-thirds of Colombian women live within 50 kilometers of conflict zones. Provinces most affected by conflict and those with higher Indigenous and Afro-Colombian populations tend to score lower on the WPS Index.

Ambassador Melanne Verveer, Executive Director of the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security, commented, “The world is witnessing a growing number of conflicts. Simultaneously, there is a rise in authoritarianism aimed at curbing women’s progress. The Index reminds us that there is a direct correlation between the well-being of women and the well-being of nations. Investments in advancing gender equality are also investments in peace, security, and prosperity.”

'Happy Grandmas': Women weave to protect Kyrgyzstan's ancient shyrdak rug

They meet in the small town of Kadamjay –– nestled between the Alay mountains –– to preserve the endangered craft and boost their meagre pensions.


AFP ARCHIVE

Tashkan Khakimova, 77, weaves a Shyrdak, at the House of Culture of the Metallurgists of Kadamjay, in Kyrgyzstan's remote region of Batken / Photo: AFP Archive

Tashkan Khakimova, 77, crouched over a wooden weaving machine, wool speeding through her fingers, using a traditional rug-making technique in Kyrgyzstan's remote mountainous region of Batken.

A young schoolgirl held the remaining wool next to Khakimova, dressed in a white headscarf and a velvet jacket with traditional embroidery on it.

After several hundred hours of work, the wool will be transformed into a shyrdak –– a traditional Kyrgyz rug.

Khakimova is one of a shrinking number of mostly elderly people living in the Central Asian country's mountainous areas who know how to make a shyrdak.

Many worry the ancient art will die out.

"Our parents taught us the technique, but people are forgetting it," Khakimova told AFP news agency.

She is part of a group of older women calling themselves the "Happy Grandmas" who meet in the small town of Kadamjay –– nestled between the Alay mountains –– to preserve the endangered craft and boost their meagre pensions.

UNESCO has warned that the skill of making the unique rugs is "in need of urgent safeguarding", with an abundance of synthetic carpets and the young being mostly disinterested.


The "Happy Grandmas" have a mission: to attract Kadamjay's youngsters to learn the ancient technique.

The group of around 20 women meet several times a week in the local Soviet-era house of culture, encouraging school children to learn how to weave.

"We come here so that this craft can be passed on from generation to generation, to teach it to young people," Khakimova said.


Tashkan Khakimova from "Happy Grandmas" teaches a girl how to weave a Shyrdak in Kyrgyzstan's remote region of Batken



'Attract the young'

Rakhat Dzhoroyeva, another woman in the group, said it was important to preserve the rugs as "these are customs that we inherited from our ancestors."

"We don't want to sit at home with our arms crossed," she said. "We decided to continue the tradition."

The women use wool from their own animals to make the rugs.

"Production costs nothing," Dzhoroyeva said, adding that wool is collected from cattle, sheep and goats and that "nothing goes to waste."

She energetically lifts threads with a comb to strengthen the knots of the brown carpet she is making.

The shyrdak will then be decorated with colourful traditional patterns recalling the nomadic culture of the Kyrgyz people, before being cut out and quilted to make it more resistant.

The pensioners meet at the "House of Culture of the Metallurgists" of Kadamjay –– a city built in the 1930s around a huge metals factory that is now shut down.

Hoping to "attract the young", the women take centre stage in the building, with their traditional singing reverberating around the marble hall.

Curious schoolgirls walk past, with a six-year-old soon crouching down to examine the work done by the retirees.

'A lot of orders'


Living in Kyrgyzstan's poorest region, the "Happy Grandmas" also hope selling the home-made rugs will boost their pensions.

"I get around 6,000 som in pension (around 64 euros a month)," said Saliya Bozhoyeva, another woman in the group.

"We can sell rugs for several hundred euros, it allows me to compensate (for) my pension."

The rusty, abandoned metals factory –– which used to employ many of the women –– towers over Kadamjay.

Its bankruptcy has led to unemployment and an exodus of the working population.

"My husband and I used to work at the factory, but today young people are forced to look elsewhere," Khakimova said.

Like many families in Kyrgyzstan, her children have gone to Russia –– a traditional place of employment for Central Asians –– to look for work.

But the "Happy Grandmas" have some hope: there has been a renewed interest in traditional Kyrgyz carpets.

Easing tensions with neighbouring Uzbekistan have raised the possibility of attracting tourists to this remote region and the chance to strengthen the local economy –– with some orders even coming from abroad.

"We have a lot of orders, mainly from Bishkek," said Dzhoroyeva.

She added, joyfully: "And soon, we will send a rug to Japan."

SOURCE: AFP

 

Raider X to fly 2024, it’s 98% complete, the engine being installed

Lockheed Martin’s subsidiary, Sikorsky, is set to commence the installation of the U.S. Army’s newly upgraded Improved Turbine Engine [ITEP] to its cutting-edge Raider X aircraft, crafted for the Future Attack Reconnaissance [FARA] program. 

After receipt of the engine at Sikorsky’s West Palm Beach facility, a thorough examination was conducted jointly by the Sikorsky engineers and the U.S. Army. Following this, it was transported to the engine integration test lab adjacent to the Raider X assembly area on the 20th of October. 

“The Sikorsky team’s confidence is bolstered for the last phase of the Raider X build”. This was said by the Vice President of Future Vertical Lift, Andy Adams. This has been achieved thanks to Lockheed Martin’s model-based systems engineering methodology. This approach is poised to hasten the timeline of weapon system completion, catering to the urgency of reconnaissance missions. 

Lockheed's Sikorsky introduced a high-speed combat helicopter Raider-X
Photo credit: Lockheed Martin

Beyond capable

The Raider X has capabilities beyond just combat. It can collect intelligence and operates quickly and skillfully. This enhances the Army’s ability to sense threats from a distance. At the same time the Army strengthening the network connectivity among soldiers and joint forces. All these ensuring continuous access to crucial mission information.

The Raider X is nearing completion, currently at 98%. Once Sikorsky finishes installing additional instruments, the immediate focus will shift to engine installation. This will be followed by comprehensive system tests and evaluations. 

Upon test success, the procedures of engine activation and a drive system check with the installed ITEP in the aircraft will occur. All system checks are satisfactory, the subsequent steps involve flight acceptance testing and the actual first flight.

First, fly in 2024 

The inaugural flight of Raider X is projected for late 2024, upon receipt of the Army’s flight approval for the engine and the aircraft. Beyond the Raider X, the Army also plans to incorporate the ITEP engine into the UH-60 Black Hawk fleet. 

Andy Adams explains the indispensability of the ITEP engine for the modus operandi of the Black Hawk, with its augmented fuel efficiency and power surge by 50% from the existing version. It bolsters lift capability and extends the aircraft’s flight range. He emphasized that even with the incorporation of Future Vertical Lift aircraft by the U.S. Army, the Black Hawk will maintain its pivotal role as the tactical air assault and utility aircraft.

Raider X development

At the Association of the United States Army’s annual meeting held on October 14, 2019, Sikorsky unveiled the Raider X concept. This concept was a derivative of the previous Sikorsky S-97 Raider, which was conceived for the Army’s Armed Aerial Scout program. The S-97, in turn, was an evolution of the Sikorsky X2 prototype compound coaxial helicopter. 

The more substantial Sikorsky–Boeing SB-1 Defiant also emerged from the X2 as part of the Army’s Future Vertical Lift initiative. This was to develop a joint multi-role rotorcraft with the SB-1 being a possible choice for the Future Long Range Assault Aircraft project. 

Sikorsky’s compound helicopter designs uniformly employ coaxial rigid rotors coupled with a pusher propeller, a setup commonly known as “X2 Technology”

On March 25, 2020, the Army moved forward with the Raider X and Bell 360 Invictus concept designs. This plan involves the creation and testing of flying prototypes in 2022, culminating in a competitive flight demonstration by the fall of 2023. Notably, Sikorsky had already started construction of the Raider X prototype by February 2020.

Raider X design

The Raider X, a product of the FARA program’s requirements, is engineered to operate on the singular power of a General Electric T901 engine. The GE T901 engine, a result of the Army’s Improved Turbine Engine Program, was designed as the go-to engine for current and forthcoming Army rotorcraft. 

Drawing from the performance of S-97 and X2, it is anticipated that Raider X will achieve a peak speed extending beyond 250 kn [460 km/h; 290 mph]. Raider X shoult reach a service ceiling that surpasses 9,000 feet [2,700 m]. Reflecting the S-97 as an 80% scale model, the Raider X is projected to weigh in at 14,000 lb [6,400 kg]. The responsibility of designing and crafting the fuselage sits with Swift Engineering. 

The cockpit is designed with side-by-side seating, a departure from the usual tandem seating found in American attack helicopters. Furthermore, weapons and sensors are housed internally through a modular system. This layout is in line with FARA’s stipulations, thereby accommodating future technological advancements and offsetting obsolescence.

***

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Almost 100 Palestinians killed by Israel in occupied West Bank since 7 October

As Israeli bombing of Gaza continues, Israeli forces ramp up crackdown on Palestinians in the West Bank. According to experts, as an attempt to prevent an explosion of Palestinian activism, linked to Gaza events.

Qassam Muaddi
West Bank
25 October, 2023

Israeli forces killed 98 Palestinians and arrested around 1,000 in the occupied West Bank since 7 October.
 [Qassam Muaddi/TNA]

Israeli violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank has seen an unprecedented spike in years.

On Monday, 23 October, 98 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces or settlers since 7 October after Israeli troops killed two Palestinians in the Jalazon refugee camp, north of Ramallah, and two other Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces near Nablus.

Palestinian residents in Jalazon described Israeli forces' raid on Monday as "unprecedentedly violent", with 20 Palestinians arrested, including a disabled man, and dozens were wounded.

"The occupation forces used live fire and shot directly at people, not randomly and not in the air", a 25-year-old resident of Jalazon who asked not to be named, told The New Arab.
"Soldiers opened fire heavily in a way I have never seen before, and I have witnessed many raids by the occupation on the camp", the resident said.

"They raided many houses and beat people inside their houses, and all those who were arrested were beaten", they said. "There were also many wounded and a lot of property damage, especially cars, some of which were a source of livelihood for transportation workers".

"There has been a sombre atmosphere in the camp since Monday; some elderly who sit in front of shops have tears in their eyes, and houses and shops have been playing prayers since the morning", they added. "It is a heavy trauma that the community is living through, and a lot of anguish as people worry that raids will be as violent in the future".

On Sunday, Israeli warplanes bombed a mosque in the Jenin refuge camp in the northern West Bank, killing two Palestinians. The Israeli army claimed in a statement that its air force bombed a tunnel underneath the mosque, in which Palestinian militants allegedly hid.
At the same time, Israeli settlers have ramped up their attacks on Palestinian villagers in the occupied West Bank, especially farmers during the olive harvest.

On Monday, Israeli settlers attacked a Palestinian farmer family in the town of Taybeh, east of Ramallah, physically aggressing three of the family members and causing a jaw injury to one of them. Settlers also stole the day's harvest.

"We were at the harvest, east of the town, when some five settlers arrived, two of them armed, and began to beat us", Musa Khoury, a member of the aggressed family, told TNA.

"Settlers threatened us and beat me, my nephew and my sister while the rest of the family ran away", said Khoury. They took the chart where we had three large bags of olives which we had harvested since the morning, then left", he added.
The town of Taybeh has received hundreds of Palestinians displaced by armed settlers from two Bedouin communities near the town in the past two weeks.

Also last week, a 37-year-old Palestinian woman from the neighbouring town of Deir Jarir was killed by Israeli settlers, while her 17-year-old son was wounded with three bullets.

The ramp-up of Israeli raids and settler violence has accompanied a spike in Israeli arrests of Palestinians in the West Bank. According to the Palestinian Prisoners' Club, some 1,000 Palestinians have been arrested since 7 October, while electricity and water have been dramatically reduced for Palestinian detainees to as little as one hour per day in some Israeli jails.

Meanwhile, Palestinian militant actions against Israeli forces and settlers have also spiked in the past two weeks. According to Palestinian media sources, some 1,114 militant actions have been reported against Israeli targets since 7 October, compared to 1050 actions during September.

According to media reports, these actions mainly included shooting attacks, stone and Molotov cocktails thrown at Israeli troops during raids, or Israeli vehicles travelling on inter-settlement Israeli roads.

MENA
Qassam Muaddi

The only Israeli casualties reported have been eight Israeli soldiers wounded in confrontations with Palestinian fighters in the Nur Shams refugee camp in Tulkarm on Friday and one Israeli soldier injured in confrontations with unarmed Palestinians during an Israeli raid on the village of Burqa, near Nablus early on Tuesday.

According to Palestinian historian and researcher in the history of Palestinian resistance, Bilal Shalash, "The occupation is trying to prevent an explosion of the situation in the West Bank as it prepares for a ground invasion in Gaza".

"Most of the Palestinians being arrested since 7 October are people who have some kind of organisational experience, even in civil activism, which indicates that the occupation is trying to undermine the possibility of the current wave of anger developing into an organised movement", said Shalash.


The New Arab Staff & Agencies

Shalash also remarked that "there is a clear popular discontent towards the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, and this kind of discontent has historically translated into support for resistance groups against the occupation, which jeopardises stability in the West Bank".

"These groups have rapidly grown fighting experience, especially in Jenin and Nablus", he noted. "The worst case scenario for the occupation is these groups beginning to merge into an organised movement, but such a development depends on how the war unfolds in Gaza", he added.

Since 7 October, Israeli forces have killed more than 5,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, including more than 1,500 children, and displaced 1.4 million in its ongoing bombing of the Gaza Strip.


Biden condemns retaliatory attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Wednesday spoke out against retaliatory attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel.
20231025141052-65396437cb0685f73c7b9529jpeg
President Joe Biden and Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese hold a news conference in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Wednesday spoke out against retaliatory attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel. He also said he was redoubling his commitment to working on a two-state solution to end the decadeslong Israel-Palestinian conflict

Biden said the attacks by settlers amounted to "pouring gasoline" on the already burning fires in the Middle East since the Hamas attack.

“It has to stop, and it has to stop now,” Biden said at the start of a news conference with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who was being honored with a state visit to Washington.

Settler violence against Palestinians has intensified since the Hamas attack, and Palestinians have been killed by settlers, according to Palestinian authorities. Rights groups say settlers have torched cars and attacked several small Bedouin communities, forcing them to evacuate to other areas.

The West Bank Protection Consortium, a coalition of nongovernmental organizations and donor countries, including the European Union, says hundreds of Palestinians have been forcibly displaced in the West Bank due to settler violence since Oct. 7. That’s in addition to over 1,100 displaced since 2022.

Deadly violence has been surging in the West Bank as the Israeli military pursues Palestinian militants in the aftermath of the Hamas attack from Gaza.

The violence threatens to open another front in the 2-week-old war, and puts pressure on the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the West Bank and is deeply unpopular among Palestinians, in large part because it cooperates with Israel on security matters.

Biden again condemned the brutality of the Hamas attack that killed 1,400 Israelis and said that he was convinced that Hamas was driven in part by a desire undo U.S.-led efforts to normalize Israeli relations with some of its Arab neighbors, including Saudi Arabia.

The president also said that after the Israel-Hamas conflict comes to an end, Israeli, Palestinians and its partners must work towards a two-state solution.

“Israelis and Palestinians equally deserve to live side by side in safety, dignity and peace,” Biden said.

The Hamas-run Health Ministry says more than 6,500 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed in retaliatory strikes. Biden said that it was critical for Israel to move carefully in its response to minimize civilian deaths.

“Israel should be incredibly careful to be sure that they’re focusing on going after the folks that are propagating this war,” Biden said.

Aamer Madhani, The Associated Press



In the Hindu diaspora, dancers and feminists celebrate the modern cultural significance of Navaratri

Throughout the United States, South Asian Americans young and old have come out to dance garba, the folk dance that began as a devotional form of worship and has now become a cultural phenomenon for Hindus and non-Hindus alike.


People dance during the Dandiya Drop garba in New York City. Photo by Misha Patel

(RNS) — The garba, a folk dance from western India once performed by women at home to celebrate the Hindu goddess Durga, has improbably inspired Bollywood-sized performances at social gatherings and competitions in the United States.

The garba originated in Gujarat, the state along India’s western coast, as part of celebrations of the holiday of Dussehra that marks the end of Navaratri, a nine-day festival of devotion to the Hindu goddess Durga that ends Tuesday (Oct. 24).

Honoring the divine feminine energy of Durga and her incarnations, the garba, whose name comes from the Sanskrit word for womb, has been danced by thousands of colorfully dressed South Asians across New York and New Jersey over the past nine days. It is often danced on college campuses and at local community centers until long after midnight.

Many of those dancing will be non-Hindus, as second-generation Hindu Americans have hosted garba events that emphasize the dance’s fostering of community. 

At Maria Hernandez Park in Brooklyn, New York, on Sunday, professional dancer Alisha Desai, whose father is Gujarati, welcomed passersby to take part in a garba performance and workshop in collaboration with the Brooklyn Arts Council.

Alisha Desai, left, performs alongside other dancers. Photo courtesy of Alisha Desai

“I wanted everyone to feel comfortable,” said Desai. “If you are Hindu, I wanted you to have a good time and practice your beliefs with everybody. But I wanted anyone who maybe doesn’t even know who Durga is to feel comfortable enough to join in and celebrate.”

Describing herself as spiritual, not religious, Desai said the art form has been vital in connecting her to her own heritage. Desai studied classical Indian dance in India for a year while in college, where she was inspired to bring a taste of large-scale garba back to her own community in Brooklyn.

“Art and dance are spiritual acts,” said Desai. “It is a way to connect to the oneness and everybody, and a higher power. That’s kind of my meditation, and my way of grounding myself.”

Pankti Doshi, a Gujarati American from the Bay Area, said the communal nature of the dance led her to co-found the event planning group and/aur, which hosts meetups and parties for South Asian American New Yorkers looking for a way to connect with their culture. 

“I was constantly surrounded by South Asian people,” said Doshi. “I had this feeling instilled in me that: I am South Asian, I am Indian, and I’m so excited to be a part of this community.”

People dance during the Dandiya Drop garba in New York City. Photo by Misha Patel

Her group’s unique garba was called Dandiya Drop: a pop-up event for adults, complete with drinks and dance influencers, specifically pitched toward the children of immigrants like her, who have a unique American experience, she said. (A dandiya, or dandiya raas, is a variation of the garba, in which sticks are slapped together.)

“Garba is really an experience where people are gathered to build that sense of belonging, where they’re sharing a new culture, a new dance and a sense of contagious energy,” she said. “There’s this underlying feeling that we’re creating a sense of home in such a large city.”



According to Shana Sippy, an associate professor of religion and chair of Asian studies at Centre College in Kentucky, the traditions of Hinduism, diverse as they are, readily adapt to the local context. Garba, as it has migrated out of Gujarat, has transitioned from a domestic folk dance to become “a way to represent your culture and your tradition,” said Sippy. “Not only are you embodying your culture by dancing, but you are representing it to others.”

Navaratri celebrations don’t end with garba. In south India, women of the house put together golus, or tiered altars of dolls and items depicting events in Hindu mythology. Bengali people celebrate Dussehra with a large-scale Durga puja, or ritual.

The first time Vasudha Narayanan, a Hindu scholar at the University of Florida, participated in a garba was when she came to America from southern India in the 1980s. But for years since, she has hosted a golu open house.



Vasudha Narayanan poses in front of her golu, a tiered Hindu altar. Photo courtesy of Vasudha Narayanan

The United States, Narayanan said, lends itself to pan-Hindu celebrations, where immigrants and their first-generation offspring can share the nuances of local traditions their families left behind.

“It is the transmission of culture through music and dance, both horizontally — communicating it to Hindus from other parts of India — as well as vertically, to the next generation,” said Narayanan. “That kind of transmission helps us understand the diversity of Hinduism and that it’s not a single way of celebration or belief.”

Anu Sehgal founded the Culture Tree in New York with the intention of teaching South Asian language classes to kids in the diaspora. But since its start, the school has become a hallmark of Indian cultural programming geared toward children, from puppet shows to museum exhibits.

While her goal is to keep religion out of her educational programs, Sehgal doesn’t shy from introducing Navaratri traditions to children with its cultural history, including the widely known story of Durga’s victory over the demon Mahisha.

People attend Navaratri festival celebrations in India Square in Jersey City, New Jersey, Oct. 21, 2023. RNS photo by Richa Karmarkar

“There is such a huge benefit of celebrating festivals for these children, for including their heritage, their culture, their languages in everyday life,” said Sehgal. “Our kids will learn about their heritage, customs and community through all of these celebrations. All while having fun!”

Her organization’s garba event at New York’s Waterline Park brought together thousands of South Asians, Hindus and people of other faiths, for a family-friendly evening, including two dance circles: one for seasoned experts and one for kids. 

Even as South Asians of all faiths have come to enjoy garba, so too have college students of any faith and none: On campuses across the U.S., competitions have sprung up that go all year long. In April, the University of Texas’ Dirty South Dandiya won the 15th annual Raas All-Stars National Championship in Chicago.

“Garba is not just about feminine power, but it’s also about bringing people together,” said Sehgal. “People were in sync with each other, they were looking at each other, following each other’s cues. Everyone has to dance in unison. How powerful is that?”




People participate in a garba dance during Navaratri festival celebrations in India Square in Jersey City, New Jersey, Oct. 21, 2023. RNS photo by Richa Karmarkar