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When
the first Americanmusic videos and popularTV shows began
appearing in Indian homes in the early 1990s thanks to
satellite and cable, many predicted Indian society would
never be the same. For the first time, young Indian women
saw a regular dose of sexy, scantily clad divas shimmying.
Female viewers also saw independent, successful women,
like Ally McBeal. Sex and divorce were openly discussed in
these TV imports and couples kissed passionately -- then
still a taboo in Indian TV shows and movies.
Indeed,
the impact on younger generations of Indian women has been
profound. Whereas Indian women traditionally have been
submissive to parents and husbands and valued frugality
and modesty, a number of sociological studies show that
young Indian females now prize financial independence,
freedom to decide when to marry and have children, and
have glamorous careers.
A
generation back, women would sacrifice themselves and
believed in 'saving for the rainy days'. However things
have changed drastically, since. The successful woman of
today believes in spending their hard earned money in the
way they entirely wish to. It is now acceptable for a
woman to want something for herself, and people will
accept it if she goes out into a man's world making a
statement.
The
image of the modern Indian woman is no longer confined.
The traditional image of woman being a perpetuator of the
family is fast giving way to a new generation of
successful woman who can match her strides with the men in
our society. A recent controversial, yet successful
advertisement of Fair and lovely highlights this fact. A
daughter came home and found that her parents had no sugar
for coffee because they couldn't afford it. She became an
airline hostess. She then visited her parents and took
them to a first class restaurant. This is a reflection of
a woman today who is capable of taking care of her parents
akin to her male counterpart.
Women
today have succeeded in more fields than one. There
remains no arena that is untouched by her. Lets take a
closer look at some of the professions she has exploited
and has carved herself a niche not only in her country but
worldwide.
The
success stories of women remain incomplete without
crossing the seven seas. Women's acclaim has been heard
within and outside the country. A lot has been said about
the ones living in India; however there remain some women
who have kept a low profile or those whose dreams remain
incomplete due to their untimely demise. I choose to talk
about a two such laudable women.
The
precinct of literature will definitely be sketchy without
the mention of Divakaruni. Despite being natively a
Bengali she did not manage to garner as much cognizance as
one who would typically hail from Calcutta. Here was a
Bengali woman who penned down some of the best novels only
to push herself to oblivion. She completely skirted from
the limelight.
Born
in India she lived there until 1976, till the age of
nineteen, at which point she left Calcutta and came to the
United States. She continued her education in the field of
English by receiving a Master's degree from Wright State
University in Dayton, Ohio, and a Ph.D. from the
University of California at Berkeley. She briefly lived in
Chicago and Ohio before she settled in Sunnydale,
California in 1979.
As
a novice she earned money for her education by doing many
odd jobs, including babysitting, selling merchandise in an
Indian boutique, slicing bread in a bakery, and washing
instruments in a science lab.
The
student of Loreto House and Presidency College's nature of
work remains predominantly autobiographical. Most of her
works dwells into the life of immigrant experience set in
the Bay Area of California.
Her
book titled 'Arranged Marriage' is a collection of short
stories, all about women from India caught between two
cultures. In 'The Mistress of Spice', the character Tilo
provides spices, not only for cooking, but also for the
homesickness and alienation that the Indian immigrants
often experience.
Her
clement style attempts to bring people together by
breaking myths and stereotypes. She has, through her
writing has tried to break the confines and thaw the
boundaries between people from varied backgrounds, ages,
communities, cultures. The acknowledgement comes in form
of recognition that she receives from her fans, most of
them being immigrant women. Her opus speaks of women in
love, in relationship, in hardships etc.
Divakaruni's
sensibility towards women issues compelled her to rehash
the treatment of women in America. At Berkeley, she
volunteered at a women's center and became interested in
helping battered women. She then started MAITRI, a
helpline for South Asian women that helps victims of
domestic violence and other abusive situations. with a
group of friends and has been the president of MAITRI
since 1991, which eventually led her to write 'Arranged
Marriage', a work that includes stories about the abuse
and courage of immigrant women.
Arranged
marriage beautifully weaves out the lives of immigrant
brides who are "both liberated and trapped by
cultural changes" and who are struggling to carve out
an identity of their own.
The
bearer of over 30 anthologies has also penned down 'Sister
of My Heart', which talks about the lives of two women and
how they are changed by marriage, as one woman comes to
California, and the other stays behind in India. The Vine
of Desire (2002) continues the story of the two friends.
The Unknown Errors of Our Lives is a collection of stories
"about family, culture, and the seduction of
memory".
Chitra
Divakaruni is also the editor of Multitudes, an anthology
she uses in her own classroom. She teaches creative
writing at the University of Houston, one of the best in
country.
The
other interesting facet about the author is her keen
interest in the field of poetry. Before she started her
stint in fiction writing she was a poet of some acclaim.
Her poetry deals with a wide variety of themes, and she
tends to bend towards immigrant experience and to South
Asian women. She shows the experiences and struggles
involved in women trying to find their own identities.
Divakaruni's
latest collection, Leaving Yuba City, is unique because it
includes series of poems based on and inspired by various
art forms, including paintings by Francesco Clemente,
photographs by Raghubir Singh, and specific Indian films,
such as Salaam Bombay. With these poems, Divakaruni once
again shows how boundaries can be destroyed, as she
illustrates how different art forms are not independent
entities, but how they can, in fact, influence each other.
Her
latest novel is called Queen of Dreams, set in the Bay
area of California, the story, like Chitra's earlier
works, explores the immigrant experience in the US. She
strikes to achieve an atypical balance between eastern
theology and contemporary American culture.
With
Mistress of Spice is heading for a full-fledged film,
starring Aishwarya Rai produced by Gurinder Chawla and
directed by husband Paul Mayeda Berges, we may soon be
seeing the author from New Alipore emerging to levels of
stupendous publicity a fact that so far has been contrary
to her demeanor.
She
has a children's book on the way next year, titled Mirror
of Fire and Dreaming, and another tale in the works,
"an ambitious project" that revisits the
Mahabharata from the perspective of its women characters.
She
currently lives in Sunnydale with her husband and two
children while teaching creative writing at CA.
Today,
her work has been published in over 50 magazines. And
while she continues to satiate her desire with the power
of the pen she surely represents the woman that India can
proudly look up to even as she stays miles away from her
motherland.
Whether
one calls her the able astronaut or the Sikh in Space,
Kalpana Chawla , the Indian born space scientist who left
the aerospace in a quandary on the fateful day her shuttle
Colombia, crashed on the 1 February 2003, was one of the
finest astronauts, with an exemplary drive to make a mark
in the world of Space Research.
Kalpana
obtained her degree in aeronautical engineering from the
Punjab Engineering College and pursued higher studies at
the University of Texas, from where she did her masters in
the same subject.
Chawla,
who had migrated to the United States in the 1980s,
married Jean-Pierre Harrison a pilot by profession and was
a naturalised American citizen.
The
41-year-old NASA astronaut always cherished dreams of
being an aerospace engineer and going to the moon one day.
She
often mused, as she watched airplanes flying over her head
in the local flying clubs in India, she would passionately
along with her brother follow it on their bikes till it
disappeared. Such fervent liking for the subject took her
to the University of Colorado for her doctorate in
aerospace engineering in 1988.
Thereafter,
her journey for the stars took off. After her successful
stint at the NASA Ames Research Centre, she briefly joined
a private firm as a vice president conjuring various body
functions for future space missions.
Reminiscing
her days back home she revealed that her father could
never fathom her interests in space science. He always
insisted that she become a doctor or teacher, unlike her
mother who accompanied her for an interview, in the Punjab
Engineering College, which back in those days was contrary
to a demeanor of a lady.
As
the chosen astronaut by NASA in 1994, her endeared dream
came true when she set foot on her maiden spaceflight in
November 1997.
However,
in 1997 as a robotic arm operator, she was unable to
retrieve an orbiting Spartan satellite, which spun away
after the shuttle released it and astronauts had to take a
spacewalk later to get it back. A post-flight NASA
evaluation absolved her of the blame.
An
attempt to summarize her grand flight history is not
facile. The milestones in her flight experiences were as
follows:
1.
STS-87 Columbia (November 19 to December 5, 1997).
STS-87 was the fourth U.S Microgravity Payload flight
and focused on experiments designed to study how the
weightless environment of space affects various physical
processes, and on observations of the Sun's outer
atmospheric layers.
Two
members of the crew performed an EVA (spacewalk) which
featured the manual capture of a Spartan satellite, in
addition to testing EVA tools and procedures for future
Space Station assembly. STS-87 made 252 orbits of the
Earth, traveling 6.5 million miles in 376 hours and 34
minutes.
2.
STS-107 Columbia (January 16 to February 1, 2003). This
was a 16-day flight totally devoted to science and
research mission. Working 24 hours a day, in two
alternating shifts, the crew successfully conducted
approximately 80 experiments.
This
mission remained incomplete. Unfortunately, the STS-107
mission ended abruptly on February 1, 2003 when Space
Shuttle Columbia and her crew perished during entry, 16
minutes prior to the scheduled landing.
Before
Columbia's lift-off, Kalpana had said that she got
inspired to take up flying from J R D Tata, who flew the
first mail flights in India. She expressed that he was an
immense driving force and that he captivated her
imagination.
She
also added that she has been inspired by explorers; she
made special mention of Shackleton and the incredible
feats that they carried out, where they almost made it to
the South Pole but wisely decided to stop a hundred miles
short and returned.
In
previous interviews, Chawla said she always thought she'd
become an engineer rather than an astronaut but then
realized that the posters she kept on her dorm-room walls
of shuttles and space probably subconsciously pushed her
aspirations.
Chawla,
whose first name Kalpana means "thought" or
"imagination" or "dreams" in the
ancient Indian language Sanskrit, in a sense lived up to
her name. She ignited her imagination, dreamt for the
stars and went as close to it, as one possibly could. With
her goals set at an early age, it was journey on the known
tracks and a fight against all odds. •
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