We are just Americans, says Indian-origin Bobby Jindal of his ilk
Washington : Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, while announcing his 2016 White House bid, on Thursday invoked the success story of his immigrant parents but once again distanced himself from his Indian roots by asserting that “we are all Americans” and not hyphenated Americans.
Forty four years ago, Jindal said, a young couple who had never before been on an airplane, left their home on the other side of the world to come to a place called America.
Bobby Jindal was born in Baton Rouge, soon after his Punjab-born parents, Amar and Raj, came to the US, he said.
“They had never seen it. There was no internet to search, but they had heard the legend. There was a place in this world where people were free and the opportunities were real,” Jindal said referring to the journey his parents made to the US from India.
“They weren’t really coming to a geographical place. They were coming to an idea, and that idea is America. To them, America represented all that was good in the world, where you could get ahead if you worked hard and played by the rules, a place where what matters is the content of your character, not the colour of your skin, the zip code you were born in or your family’s last name,” he said.
“I am done with all this talk about hyphenated Americans. We are not Indian-Americans, African-Americans, Irish-Americans, rich Americans or poor Americans. We are all Americans,” he said amidst applause from the audience.