Zohran Mamdani and the Question of Civilizational Belonging

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Kabir:

I would question how one defines “Indian” culture vs “Hindu” culture (this is a real question, I’m not being snarky). Zohran speaks Urdu/Hindi, wears shalwar kameez and uses Bollywood references in his campaign. So clearly, he has no issues with Indian culture. He’s not a Hindu so he doesn’t go to temples etc. I’m not sure exactly what you expect him to do?

While Zohran Mamdani expresses outward familiarity with “Indian” culture — speaking Hindi/Urdu, referencing Bollywood, wearing traditional attire — these are surface markers. They do not, on their own, constitute rootedness in Indian civilizational identity. Indian culture, especially post-Partition, is not simply a composite of languages and aesthetics. It is anchored in Dharma — a diffuse but pervasive civilisational ethos shaped over millennia by Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain worldviews.

Despite being born to a Hindu mother, Zohran’s public identity is strongly framed within a Muslim, Middle Eastern, and postcolonial activist context. His political and cultural instincts appear more aligned with pan-Islamic and Western progressive causes than with any articulation of Indian philosophical or spiritual heritage. His Syrian Muslim spouse, activist framing, and lack of visible engagement with Indic traditions contribute to this perception.

This is not a religious critique but a civilizational one. Just as Israel defines its national identity through a broadly Jewish character — irrespective of belief — India’s cultural self-understanding is inseparable from its Hindu roots. To be Indian, in this view, is not to perform cultural familiarity but to resonate with the metaphysical and historical rhythms of the civilization.

By that measure, Zohran — despite South Asian ancestry — does not code as civilizationally Indian, but rather as an American progressive of South Asian Muslim extraction. The distinction is subtle but important.

What Was the Point of Israel’s Iran Strike?

Posted on Categories Bahá’í, Culture, History, Religion, X.T.MTags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 24 Comments on What Was the Point of Israel’s Iran Strike?

The Limits of Provocation

At some point, the world will have to ask: what exactly was Israel hoping to achieve?

In the days following the dramatic escalation between Tel Aviv and Tehran, we are left not with clarity but with a deepening sense of confusion. If the intention was to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program, there is little to show for it—centrifuges still spin, scientists remain in place, and the infrastructure of Iran’s deterrent capability stands unshaken. If the aim was to trigger chaos within the Iranian regime, then that too has failed—Tehran did not descend into disarray; it retaliated, measured and intact. And if the goal was symbolic, to remind the world of Israel’s reach and resolve, then the moment has already passed, clouded by questions of proportionality, legality, and consequence.

For all the fire and fury, the strike landed with the strategic weight of a gesture. Continue reading What Was the Point of Israel’s Iran Strike?

Zohran Mamdani thread

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Zohran Mamdani has won the Democratic mayoral primary in New York City after Andrew Cuomo conceded.  The largest city in the US may have a mayor who is South Asian, Muslim and a Democratic Socialist–only in America!

I’m linking to an interesting article in The Guardian entitled “Mamdani’s defeat of Cuomo offers Democrats a path out of the wilderness” 

What are other commentators’ thoughts on Zohran? It would be particularly interesting to hear from those based in the US.

 

 

 

Open Thread– June 21

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Talk about whatever you feel like

Three links I found interesting:

Scroll Adda: ‘Secular forces fixate on footnotes, Hindutva gets how Indians deal with history’

Can Zohran Mamdani, the first South Asian to run to be New York mayor, pull off an upset?

‘The House of Awadh’: The exile and echoes of Begum Wilayat Mahal, the queen of nowhere

 

Brown Pundits