Log has written
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2009

In early December, as we pulled up to my ancestral village, the gaon called Baranghati where my father was born and his father before him, I noticed a man balancing two bales of paddy on a long stick teetering on his bare back. He was barefoot and struggling. I looked at his face.

“That’s my uncle,” I told my daughter. She nodded, more interested in the ducks and cows scattered every which way.

I sat with him later and out came the story I hear each time I visit. The village remained the same as in the 1940s, when my grandfather left to set up a business elsewhere, the same as in the 1970s, when my father left for the US, the same through the 1990s as India’s urban centres joined the global economy and all accompanying comforts.

His tone was short and matter-of-fact: bad schools, bad roads, no health care, no adequate political representation. A small herd of us—my three cousins, my daughter, our driver—would take short jaunts in and out of various distant relatives’ homes and hear the same.

As I sit here in New York City typing this column, which will be my last for Mint, Baranghati and the place where a part of my roots ultimately untangle feels a world away from the US that is sleek, slick, shiny, packaged, crunchy, home. With each visit, it becomes less clear why I am there and what I can do. My female cousins have mostly been married off, the “lucky” ones to cities across Assam; the young male cousins mostly operate small stalls elsewhere selling SIM cards and cassettes and toffees. Few farm, leaving greying men like my uncle—really the son of my grandfather’s cousin—to handle the hard labour.

I somehow cling to the image of he who forms a part of me and my history, one whom I might not otherwise give a second glance if encountered on the streets of Delhi or even Guwahati. We have little in common, little to say, and yet I fear the day when my offspring and theirs will no longer feel connected to a place like this, or even to each other.

And that, I suppose, is the answer.

Readers might recall I began this column on 3 February 2007 puzzled about how everywhere I went, Indians asked me, “Why did you come back?”

For almost two years now, I’ve pondered and offered various explanations in this space, including the need to follow opportunity eastward, to the country that birthed my parents but never seemed big enough for their ambitions.

In the process, I’ve delved into not just the two Indias, but the countless Indias that perplexed me, yet ultimately define me: The young cousins who work as engineers and managers in Chennai, Hyderabad, Mumbai; the in-laws in gated communities of Gurgaon and Noida; a large close-knit patchwork across Guwahati; and those more removed relatives in the village. For the last few weeks, I felt compelled to be among the latter in Assam, distanced from the first-class and five-stars that had unintentionally been the backdrop to so much of our India stay in New Delhi. It was hard for me to explain to anyone just why we were going and why for so long. Sure, we planned to volunteer, to attend a few family weddings, but just what was it we were after?

The answers unveiled themselves mostly through my daughter: when she took her clothes off and jumped into a stream during a family picnic, frolicking with the children of my cousins and laughing in the way we used to; when she performed a Bihu dance on Christmas eve with another set of cousins and they laughed and traded inside jokes; when she joined that uncle with a stick and led the cows in rounds over the paddy heaped in his mud courtyard.

We non-resident Indians spend lifetimes hanging on yet criticizing, looking back yet teaching our children to “be Indian” through Bharatnatyam, religion classes and memorizing the national anthem. But having gone through several stages of definition and creation of said identity, that won’t be enough.

And so, when my daughter sobbed as we left India last week (why can’t we take the maid with us? I don’t want to leave my cousins or my dog. When will we come back?), in her raw, young reaction, I finally had an answer to why we had come that is far more becoming and honest than “because the economy’s booming”. I sympathized with her, having felt the same way numerous times as I departed India, chastising my parents for leaving in the first place.

But after two years in India, I know now why they did, discoveries I often wrote about here.

Through my daughter, though, I learnt something perhaps much more important—the reason India continues to lure. Despite her tears, my emotions ran far more joyous as we bid farewell.

Home is a place you can always come back to, after all.

This is the final instalment of S. Mitra Kalita’s column in Mint. Your comments are welcome at widerangle@livemint.com

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Swami Said:


How about wanting to be in India because you want to give the country something. Your article is all about what the country can give you and your family. Such NRIs are perhaps not needed by India as well.

Posted On 1/1/2009 8:45:21 AM
Anand Said:


I have read your column off and on, and frankly I am glad that I will not be seeing it anymore on Mint! I am sorry to say that and I don't mean to insult you, but your column always makes me feel like I am leading some kind of a second-class life since I live in India. This is ridiculous and I hate having to read such opinions in an Indian newspaper. There are plenty of people who ENJOY living in India. I myself moved back to India after living in the US for more than a dozen years and I have zero regrets about that. There are lots of positives about living here and it would have been nice to see you talk about those rather than to always dwell on the negatives. So, frankly, I must say Good Riddance! Good luck to you in the US!

Posted On 1/1/2009 12:57:19 PM
Re: Ravi Said:


When anyone criticises India or finds something negative why do we jump on that person as if they are robbing us. Criticism is a chance to improve, to see what needs to be made better. 15 years of a little bit of growth make us feel that everything has been achieved while the road ahead is very long and much needs to be done. So let us stop being emotional and get back to the work of rebuilding India

Posted On 1/2/2009 6:46:53 AM
Anand Said:


I have read your column off and on, and frankly I am glad that I will not be seeing it anymore on Mint! I am sorry to say that and I don't mean to insult you, but your column always makes me feel like I am leading some kind of a second-class life since I live in India. This is ridiculous and I hate having to read such opinions in an Indian newspaper. There are plenty of people who ENJOY living in India. I myself moved back to India after living in the US for more than a dozen years and I have zero regrets about that. There are lots of positives about living here and it would have been nice to see you talk about those rather than to always dwell on the negatives. So, frankly, I must say Good Riddance! Good luck to you in the US!

Posted On 1/1/2009 12:57:19 PM
Re: Harsh Said:


Dear sir. Harsh Mohan Sharma Mob: 9910790023 Add-61-D Kamla Nagar ND: 110007 Email: harsh223@rediffmail.com Career Objectives To establish a career with an organization of repute where I can get an opportunity to prove myself and get the recognition to my talent and caliber and have a chance of growth. Professional Experience Worked with Mtnl, as a C.C.E Worked with IBS, in idea process as a C.C.E Working with Aegis BPO, Vodafone Process as a S.C.C.E Educational Qualification • 10th From N.O.School. • 12th From N.O. School. • Graduate from D.U Professional Qualification • Diploma in MS-office 1st Computer (North Campus) Delhi . • Diploma in Oracle 8 i from Pentasoft (North Campus) Delhi. PERSONAL QUALITIES I am professional and very hard working person, I have excellent mind & Good sense of humor. Personal Details Father’s Name : Sh. M. M. Sharma Date of Birth : 15th Feb 1981 Gender : Male Nationality : Indian Marital Status : Unmarried Language Known : Hindi, Punjabi, English (HARSH SHARMA) I need job)

Posted On 2/24/2009 12:28:19 PM
Saket Said:


I've enjoyed reading your articles since I moved back to India from the US, one year ago now. I am disappointed that I'll not have the opportunity to read your columns in the mint going forward. I've enjoyed many of your articles and your thoughts as they all weave into very interesting and purposeful ideas.

Posted On 1/1/2009 1:28:08 PM
Puneet Said:


I'm a first class citizen in my country and that is more than enough for me. I don't want to live like a second class citizen in any other country. That is my choice. Goodbye.

Posted On 1/1/2009 1:39:16 PM
Dheeraj Said:


Looks like the whole idea why Mint hired/ contracted you because you could give some gyan to local readers on your experience with your underdeveloped native nation and the NRIs a taste of what they could experience eh! Ever been to US countryside? Except that they do mechanized farming, all other opportunities are no different from what's available at the Assam village you had referred. All the best! Have fun with Indian food and Indian movies... easier then living sub optimally.

Posted On 1/1/2009 3:41:14 PM
Malolan Said:


I have read your articles since a long time. While you do capture many harsh realities of India, you seem to be addicted to the negatives of India. You are not at all attuned to the cautious optimism of India.

Posted On 1/1/2009 4:54:52 PM
Srickant Said:


What is the point of the column? To show the societal differences? C'mon, this is a biz mag, speaking to the educated segment. We understand and have moved along. Is it supposed to be a socio-economic survey or test of patience for the readers? Trust the editors to come up with better stuff.

Posted On 1/2/2009 10:05:30 AM
Surajit Said:


Well, Sanghamitra, people here did not seem to like your exposure to the reality here, gauging by the comments to this article. However, as another returned to India person, I appreciated your articles, and suggest that people here should read the novel White Tiger for understanding India's problems - the haves and the have-nots are in separate worlds. Wishing you the best in your career and life.

Posted On 1/12/2009 4:08:45 PM
Ravi Said:


Well, this is probably the first generation which gets offended by mentions of India's poverty, negative portrayals, etc. Hopefully, some of them have genuinely experienced these realities to have a better perspective and not lived out of the elite pockets that exist throughout the country (social, financial, etc.). This is one NRI's perspective, no more no less. If all the resident Indians were asked to write, they would have similar variations with some matching this author's perspective. If someone has to grow to one's full potential, all mistakes have to be acknowledged and accepted and learnt from. We as a country will have to do the same or this glimmer of hope will be short lived.

Posted On 1/13/2009 5:21:10 PM
Chetan Said:


I have read some of your articles off and on. For the record, I grew up in India for 20 yrs, then lived in US for 20 years and now in India for last three. During my years in US, the cocktail chatter at Indian parties inevitably turned to the perpetually boring India-US discussion. I came back to give something back to the country of my birth - helped establish a business and created many jobs! I am clear that I did this for myself not for anyone else. Debating positives and negatives of US vs. India, while living there or here is pointless. It is what it is! On one hand India is simply too big for one person to make a difference, but on the other hand, it was one NRI, Gandhiji, who came back with a powerful idea and changed the world. Recognize what your goal in life is and fulfill it in your own way. Both US and India offer you the opportunity and the freedom to do what you want. I love both countries and their people. I am envious of your gift of generating prose to express your feelings but I have found your columns to be mostly about yourself. And that is disappointing.

Posted On 1/19/2009 10:07:39 PM
Re: Manlive Said:


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Posted On 5/31/2009 2:18:36 PM
Chetan Said:


I have read some of your articles off and on. For the record, I grew up in India for 20 yrs, then lived in US for 20 years and now in India for last three. During my years in US, the cocktail chatter at Indian parties inevitably turned to the perpetually boring India-US discussion. I came back to give something back to the country of my birth - helped establish a business and created many jobs! I am clear that I did this for myself not for anyone else. Debating positives and negatives of US vs. India, while living there or here is pointless. It is what it is! On one hand India is simply too big for one person to make a difference, but on the other hand, it was one NRI, Gandhiji, who came back with a powerful idea and changed the world. Recognize what your goal in life is and fulfill it in your own way. Both US and India offer you the opportunity and the freedom to do what you want. I love both countries and their people. I am envious of your gift of generating prose to express your feelings but I have found your columns to be mostly about yourself. And that is disappointing.

Posted On 1/19/2009 10:07:39 PM
Re: vikram Said:


Very well put buddy. I have lived on and off in US but inspite of all its luxury and convinience I have never felt at home outside my country.

Posted On 6/25/2009 3:07:55 AM
Roy Said:


I think S.Mitra article is a very balanced one. As someone who was born in East Africa and now living in the UK for over 35 years, returning to India as I have done periodically is a mixed bag of emotions. My wife (who was born in India) and I have visited India with our 2 daughters from childhood and given them the opportunity to assimilate India as they see it whilst trying to explain to them the challenges and disparities of India. India has come a long way. The real leap that India will make is when the majority of Indians who struggle daily can overcome the bureaucracy and corruption that pervades the system. The movie 'Slum Dog Millionaire' is probably a reflection of the real India. So the comments made are not disparaging and India needs politicians like Obama with a can do attitude - maybe Shasi Tharoor or someone like him can step forward!

Posted On 1/23/2009 4:04:42 PM
Anonymous Said:


Perhaps you must visit the US countryside for a second opinion on poverty comparisons between India and the US. Or should go to poor states like Mississipi, Oklahoma, North and South Dakota or Alabama. Lastly, it is always better to be a first class citizen in your own supposedly poor country than be a second class citizen in a developed one

Posted On 1/28/2009 1:19:11 PM
Re: Ruchi Said:


I am sure that if you were a very poor citizen of India you would have a different opinion of things. So get off your high horse, stop being silly and get to work improving India so your comments make some sense oneday.

Posted On 2/12/2009 8:08:00 AM
Uprooted Said:


I love Mint and am glad it just got better. All your columns were structured from an elitist framework and that really held you back from commenting intelligently on India and its realities. Your observations were cliched and NRIesque. As a journalist NRI or otherwise, one is supposed to move beyond one's background. It is not about shying away from India's muck - far from that, like Slumdog Millionaire showed, we like to drown in shit. We love that. Sure, the US is a nice place (after all I am just a student here), the point is it is not a comparison between NY and Dilli - but what these differences mean to you and in what tone you articulate them.

Posted On 2/19/2009 10:53:35 PM
Priya Said:


There is no doubt that India can do a lot more but seriously I feel that India is decaying very fast. People need to understand the danger point to realise what is good for India and that too fast.

Posted On 3/3/2009 4:17:40 PM
Abhishek Said:


Let me first wish you a happy journey. I tried to write here but the limit is 200o characters. As all our roots have become invisible and when dig them out in our minds, we do find ourselves attached. However I find that all of us here are in the same boat; confused and in conflict. www.banaras.blogspot.com

Posted On 4/1/2009 10:47:55 PM
Prem Said:


I was reading All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergaten, by Robert Fulghum when I found the following words very appropriate to describe Mitra. "...there are places we all come from--deep-rooty-common places--that make us who we are. And, we disdain them or treat them lightly at our peril. We turn our backs on them at the risk of self-contempt. There is a sense in which we need to go home again--and can go home again. Not to recover home, no. But to sanctify memory."

Posted On 4/8/2009 11:52:10 PM
sukhjit Said:


the "obitury" made me sad for i felt that here i am not even able to explore my own beautiful country. leave alone any other place - be it the swiss alps or usa - one lifetime is not enough for my country . i would want to be born an indian again.

Posted On 5/7/2009 5:35:10 PM
roshan Said:


i think using all the resources that the country had for u and goin to another country and contributing for their development doesnt make ny sense.......u shud hav the trust on ur own country n also there r a lot of thins that u can do 4 ur country,, in addition to that u ll b getting wat u r eligible to get......

Posted On 5/11/2009 5:02:55 PM
Amit Said:


Mitra, I think the positive thing in all these 2 years was that you got to compare India with US. Obviuosly, while in India your vision was through the American shades you'd put on, I am sure you could have delved a little deeper and commented on what makes the Indian society tick and the common strengths of American and Indian society...One thing you might have observed is how, both, American and Indian middleclass love their families...and sadly, while India may be losing that value over time, in America it will only get stronger over time...its values like these that NRIs like you should have affirmed...

Posted On 5/14/2009 1:43:59 AM
TARUN Said:


There seems to be a lot of mud slinging on both sides. NRIs have perpetuated the sense that they live in a 'affluent' bubble much removed from India. Middleclass and elitist Indians answer back with their supposedly improved lives, mostly on the back of poor indians they consider as expendable. All this goes on as the other India (poor, disenfranchised and exploited) struggle on. How to empower them is the question we should all we worrying about.

Posted On 5/29/2009 5:28:15 PM
bala Said:


i am a retired physician who left india 43yrs ago now last 33yrs living in the states find this article very interesting and find the comments even more.i visit india every year and make it a point to explore different region on every visit.i truly love india&indian people.but since i have changed and find that india has not changed with me i find myself more as a tourist but still india teaches me every time i visit.it is truly like a mother&child relationship.in our eyes mother does not age but we change.

Posted On 7/2/2009 6:39:08 AM
Re: suraiya Said:


very well said!

Posted On 8/5/2009 4:49:55 PM
Anuj Said:


We are all hypocrites...not to single out the NRIs...we all want to get the best things provided we get an opportunity....going to foren country is one such dream.. Weather we like it or not...evrybdy has this fascination of gora desh...its juss tht sme ppl get the chance and for othrs who keeps cribbing r the ones who find angoor khatte... Let's face it...every individual is born selfish...the intensity may be more or less... Everybdy wants the best in life..and tht is wht evrybdy aspires for...so whts the problem for an NRI to leave the country and live smewhere else??// The Problem is the reason tht they give to leave...their camouflaged patriotism force them to give excuses so tht they dnt carry the emotional baggage of guilt. It's understandable also....how many people in india get settled in their villages after graduating frm IITs and IIMs?...hardly anyone... We curse the NRIs for leaving india...but they are doing something good for the country...they send foreign currency to india...bring new ideas... They are more Indian than some of resident Indians... I live in india and have never been to foreign but still...i feel they are the ones who r actually preserving the indian culture.. No matter where we live...we should do our duties to the fullest and preserve our culture... Start with ur family and then ur society and thn ur country.....rather then cursing others...

Posted On 8/6/2009 3:47:35 PM
Ramdarsan Said:


What has been stressed in the article if taken positively should entice us to improve our own living conditions so that no one has to leave this beautiful country. May be the projections are negetive which is not liked by many. This could have been projected differently. One thing is missing is the emotional aspect of our people,their tollerence, compassion,humanity,love for others which is our biggest strength. No other country possess this quality.We are unique in our own way and better than all others.

Posted On 9/24/2009 12:43:56 PM