the issue. - Asian Services In Action, Inc.
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the issue. - Asian Services In Action, Inc.
CLEVELAND, OHIO OCTOBER, 2011 GENERAL DENTIST Cosmetic Dentistry Emergencies & New Patients Welcome Early AM, Evening & Weekend Hours Most Dental Insurance Plans Medicaid, Caresource Accepted Dr. Shyam Sharma, DDS 440-826-0423 RootCanal, Dentures, Bleaching, Crowns, Bridges PRICELESS–ONE COPY PER FAMILY India ™ INTERNATIONAL INDIA GROCERS Happy Diwali to All Our Customers 6855 W. 130th St., Parma Hts. OH 44130 Phone 440-885-0215 All Indian Groceries ~ Fresh Vegetables (We accept Ohio Food Stamps) Other Ohio Location: Columbus 614.798.9331 www.allindiagrocers.com Voice of Asian-Indian Americans An Independent and the Largest Newspaper of the Asian-Indian Community in Northeast Ohio Middleburg Hts., 18660 Bagley Rd., Suite 304 (Bldg 2) 21,186 INSIDE Number of Asian Indians in NE Ohio T he total population of Asian Indians in Northeast Ohio increased to 21,186 as of April 1, 2010, according to the US Census 2010 report. Among the NE counties, Cuyahoga county has the largest Asian-Indian population: 11,778. In Ohio, the largest county in terms of Asian Indian population is the Franklin county in Columbus area where 14,789 Asian Indians live. Following them are counties Hamilton 5,612; Warren 4,142; Summit (Akron area) 3,727; and Butler 2,966. The total Asian Indian population in Ohio increased to 64,187 in 2010 from 38,752 in 2000 – an increase of more than 60 percent. The total Asian Indian population in the United States increased to 2,843,391 in 2010 from 1,678,765 in year 2000 – an increase of almost 70 percent. Statewise, the four largest Asian Indian population in US are in California, 528,176; followed by New York, 313,620; New Jersey, 292,256; and Texas, 245,981. Asian Indians form the largest group in the total Asian population in Ohio. Asian population in Cuyahoga county: Asian Indian, 11,778; Chinese, 8,991; Filipino, 3,308; Japanese, 947; Korean, 2,181; Vietnamese, 2,023; and other Asian groups (like Cambodian, Laos) together, 3,655. Please see Page 11 for Asian Indian countywise population in Northeast Ohio and Statewise population in the USA Remembering Mahatma Gandhi – Born Oct. 2 – Page 5 What’s Happening ....... 2 Follow Your Dreams .... 5 Gandhi Quiz ................. 5 Community News ..... 6–7 Art & Culture ............. 8–-9 Community News....... 10 Census Report .......... 11 Cricket, Health .......... 12 Humor, Riddles ............ 13 Immigration ................. 15 Cleveland Cricket Club Midwest Champions Hindus celebrate Durga Puja festival in India and abroad during October. Picture shows actress Rani Mukherjee at a puja pandal in Kolkata, India. –Page 12 Hariprasad Chaurasia Concert O n the auspicious occasion of Diwali, the Cleveland chapter of Asha for Education invites everyone to their annual charity concert, ‘Notes of Hope’, featuring flute maestro Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia, on Saturday, October 29, 2011 at Cuyahoga Community College’s Metro campus (Tri-C) auditorium (Cleveland, OH), at 7:30 pm. One of the most renowned musicians of our times, Pt.Chaurasia has enthralled audiences across the world, including the United States, for over five decades. He will be accompanied by Pt. Subhankar Banerjee, a prolific percussionist on tabla, and Jay Gandhi on assisting flute. Individual tickets for the concert are priced at $30, $50, $75 and $100. Please visit www.hpc-cle.info or call 216-586-458 for further details. Ticket collection will go to help children’s education in India (See pgs 6 & 7) INDIA INTERNATIONAL 1801 E.12th Street, Suite 1923, Cleveland, OH 44114 PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID CLEVELAND, OH PERMIT No. 1789 Enjoy the delite of Indian Food Indian Delight 5507 Detroit Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44102 Close to Downtown Ph 216-651-4007 Lunch Buffet: Mon-Sat: 11 AM - 3 PM, Sun 12-3 PM Dining: Mon-Sat: 5:30 PM–10 PM; Sun 5 PM–9 PM www.ClassicIndianFood.Com CarryOut & Catering Available for all Occasions Asian Indian Population Rises Almost 70% in US – Page 11 NRIs Guide to Renting Out Property in India –Page 14 NRIs Can Now Open Joint Bank Accounts in India with Resident Indians –Page 14 India International Online To receive the online India International free, please send your email address to: [email protected] 10,000+ People Read India International Every Month: To Advertise, Call 216.781.4055 or [email protected] WHAT’S HAPPENING ~ Community Calendar Asian-Indian Community Associations Raas-Garba Festival The Cleveland Museum of Art in Greater Cleveland Gujarati Samaj of Greater Cleveland Wednesday, November 2, 6:30 p.m., Gartner Auditorium Contemporary Artists Lecture Series Asha for Education–Cleveland Fehmida Kapadia 216-513-6977 Association of Asian-Indian Women in Ohio (AAIWO) (440) 218-6959 www.aaiwo.org Margaret Gonsalves 440-479-6214 American Federation of Muslims of Indian Origin (AFMI) Zahid Siddiqui (440) 238-3796 Association of Indian Physicians of Northern Ohio (AIPNO) Saturday, October 1 and Saturday, October 15, 2011 Mayuri Patel & Group LIVE in CLEVELAND!! @ Tri-C (Cuyahoga Community College) Metropolitan Campus 2900 Community College Avenue, Cleveland Starts at 7:00pm Members - Free,General Admission - $5.00 Diwali Dinner 2011 Musical Night with ‘Sunhare Pal’ Satish Mahna (216) 228-1168 American Society of Engineers of Indian Origin (ASEI) Shantaram S. Pai (440) 734-1830 Bengali Cultural Society Debabrata Ghosh (440) 349-3678 Raqs Media Collective Raqs Media Collective (Jeebesh Bagchi, Monica Narula, Shuddhabrata Sengupta) broadens our understanding of what artists do. Based in Delhi, India, their focus is on urban space, global circuits, and power structures. They work as a group, employing unusual expressive means such as archive gathering and exhibition making in addition to a large variety of media in their work. Their method is philosophical inquiry and their sculptural installations encourage new cultural practices. Free to the public. On November 5th, 2011: Starts at 5:30pm Independence Middle School 6111 Archwood Rd, Independence, OH 44131 What’s Where Contact Ashok Patel 440-339-4610, Chirag Dave 440-525-4670 Bharati Cultural Society Meera Subramaniam (440) 572-0778 Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation DIWALI CELEBRATION Sreedhar Nair (440) 759-1500 FICA Mona Alag (440) 256-3247 Gujarati Samaj of Grt. Cleveland Rajesh Patel 440-465-5965 Guru Gobind Singh Sikh Society AT SHIVA-VISHNU TEMPLE Dharminder S. Kala (330) 528-0262 Indian Classical Music Society Anupa Deogaonkar 444-237-2791 India-Ohio Chamber of Commerce Radhika Reddy (216) 344-9441 Jain Society of Greater Cleveland Shanti Jain (440) 498-8234 Kasturi Kannada Society Hema Vartak (440) 235-1835 Kerala Association of Ohio Anil Kumar (440) 572-9571 NE Ohio Marathi Mandal(NEOMM) Jay Masurekar (202) 436-0997 Shiva-Vishnu Temple 7733 Ridge Rd, Parma, OH 44129 Phone: (440) 888-9433 BAPS Swaminarayan Temple 2915 Laurel Rd, Brunswick OH 44212 Phone: (330) 220-4020 ISSO Swaminarayan Temple 13354 Pearl Road, Strongsville, OH 44136 Phone: (440) 238-2222 Jain Temple (Jain Center) 3226 Boston Mills Rd, Richfield, OH 44286 Phone: 330-659-0832 Gurudwara - Richfield 7733 Ridge Road, Parma, Ohio Saturday, October 29: 3 pm Lakshmi Puja; 4:30 pm Govardhan Puja; 5 pm Annakoot; 6 pm Aarati; 7 pm Mahaprasad For more information, call 440-888-9433 Surinder Singh Chauhan (440)243-8439 Guru Nanak Foundation Temples “Kannadasan Evening” organized by Northeast Ohio Tamil Sangam (NEOTS) on Saturday, Oct 15th at Parma City Hall. The highlight of the program is a debate presented by Cleveland’s “Tamizharuvi Debate Team”. The topic of this debate is “ Kaviarasar Kannadhasan’s popularity reached a peak composing Romantic songs? or Philosophical songs?”. Chief guest is Mrs. Umayal Muthu of Detroit, Michigan, who will be the moderator and the chief judge of the debate. A variety entertainment and General Body Meeting also that evening. Please RSVPs to “[email protected]” Marwari Association (Guru Nanak Foundation) 4220 Broadview Road, Richfield, OH 44286 Phone: 330-659-3748 Gurudwara Bedford 38 Tarbell Ave. Bedford OH 44146 Ph:440-232-1702 (There is no Asian-Indian church or mosque in Cleveland area) St. Gregorios Malankara Orthodox Church Community Advocacy & Training on Cancer & Health (CATCH) Sushila Mohanka (330) 598-0642 NetIP N. Shah [email protected] Contact: Dr. T. Mathew 216-591-9632 www.stgregorioscleveland.org Asian-Indian Restaurants Orissa Society of America Brirendra Jena (330) 494-2618 Punjabi Cultural Society Barjinder Dhanoa (216) 650-2311 2 1/2 day training for Asian American/Pacific Islander organizations, health workers, community members, health advocates, cancer survivors and their families NE Ohio Telugu Assn (NEOTA) Sravanthi Vallampati (216) 233-9424 [email protected] NorthEast Ohio Tamil Sangam (NEOTS) Meyy Meyyazhagan 440-899-6394 South Asian Bar Association of Cleveland Neelam Gill 440-201-3460 November 17ʹ18, 2011 Canalway Nature Center, Cleveland 8:30amͶ4:30pm November 19, 2011 ASIA office, Cleveland 8:30amͶ12:00pm Free registration. Meals provided. Register: http://bit.ly/CATCH-OH-Registration Or email Trish Quema: [email protected] Registration deadline is Nov. 1 [email protected] Flavors of India North Olmsted 440-779-5774 India Cafe & Kitchen 440-842-7724 Saffron Patch Shaker Heights 216-295-0400 Akron 330-836-7777 Tadka North Omlsted 440-734-1500 Taste of Kerala Mayfield Heights 440-461-9212 Udupi Cafe Parma Heights 440-743-7154 Asian-Indian Stores Asian Food & Spices Solon Ph: 440-248-0801 Asian Imports North Olmsted Ph: 440-777-8101 India Food & Spices Parma Ph: 440-845-0000 India Grocers Parma Heights Ph: 440-885-0215 Indo-American Foods North Randall Ph: 216-662-0072 Indo-American Convenient Mayfield Heights Ph: 440-446-8200 Bamboo Garden Laxmi Groceries & Spices North Olsmted 440-734-0500 Parma Heights Ph: 440-842-2402 Bombay Grill Lakshmi Plaza Akron 330-664-0689 Mayfield Heights Ph: 440-460-4601 Cafe Tandoor Patel Brothers Cleveland Heights 216-371-8500 Aurora 330-562-5334 Westlake 440-835-7999 Parma Heights Ph: 440-885-4440 Cuisine of India Ram Jewelers Parma Heights 440-842-5907 440-843-4463 Spice Corner Akron Ph: 330-535-1033 Indian Delight Please send updates to: [email protected] National/Global Organizations National Federation of Indian American Association (NFIA) w ww.nfia.net Headquarters: 319 Summit Hall Road, Gaithersburg, MD 20877 USA Ph: 301-926-3013, Email:[email protected] President: Rajen Anand (562) 537-1077 Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (www.gopio.net) P.O. Box 1413, Stamford, CT 06904, USA; Phone: (818) 708-3885 Email: [email protected] President (USA): Inder Singh, Tel: 818-708-3885; American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) www.aapiusa.org Executive Office: 600 Enterprise Drive, Suite 108 Oak Brook, IL 60523 Phone: 630-990-2277 President: Dr. Vinod Shah PAGE 2 5507 Detroit Rd,Cleveland 216-651-4007 Sunny Auto Repair Jaipur Junction 216-362-6050 North Royalton 440-842-3555 Indian Embassy & Consulates in US How to Obtain an Indian Visa EMBASSY OF INDIA 2107 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008 Tel: 202-939-7000 www.indianembassy.org CONSULATES: There are four consulates: New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Houston. Ohio residents are served by the New York Consulate for visa & other services. Consulate General of India, New York 3 East, 64th Street, New York, NY10065 Tel: 212-774-0600 Fax 212-861-3788 E-mail: [email protected] www.indiacgny.org Chicago Tel: 312-595-0405 E-mail: [email protected] www.chicago.indianconsulate.com San Francisco Tel: 415-668-0662 E-mail: [email protected] www.cgisf.org Houston Tel: 713-626-2148/49 E-mail: [email protected] www.cgihouston.org INDIA INTERNATIONAL With effect from October 1, 2007, all visa applicants have to obtain visas through: Travisa Outsourcing, Inc. (All queries relating to Indian visa should be directed to them) 316 E. 53rd St., 2nd Floor New York, NY 10022 Phone: (212) 754-9900 Fax: (212) 754-9905 Email: [email protected] Website: https://www.indian-visa.com OCTOBER, 2011 Are You Tired of Paying a Higher Interest Rate on Your Mortgage than You Need to? One idea... can create thousands of jobs Are you looking to refinance and save $$$? If the answer is “Yes” then what are you waiting for? With the interest rates dropping to historic lows again find out how much you can save by refinancing your mortgage even if you refinanced recently. We are set up with a wide range of lenders who are offering some of the lowest wholesale interest rates available in Cleveland. Please Contact Manu Mehta, a licensed Mortgage consultant with extensive mortgage industry experience, for a free and confidential consultation at 216-374-8186, or via email at [email protected] Can Communicate in English, Hindi or Punjabi for your convenience. Hartford Lending Group, LLC 450 W. Wilson Bridge Rd. Ste. 150 Worthington, OH 43085 License # MB.803842.000 The Cleveland Foundation is dedicated to encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship in Cleveland. Each year, we give millions of dollars to key organizations that nurture promising ideas, such as this unique glass material that absorbs toxins from water. If job creation is important to you, why not join us? When you give to your favorite causes through the Cleveland Foundation, you can tap into our experts in investing and grantmaking so that your gift lasts – and keeps on giving – forever. 216.861.3810 877.554.5054 www.ClevelandFoundation.org If you want to be remembered, do something memorable.SM An Equal Housing Lender Jayashree Bidari, J.D. Attorney-at-Law Taste of Kerala Welcome to Taste of Kerala, a South Indian take out restaurant IMMIGRATION: Green Card; H-1B & Employment Visas; Citizenship; Family, Business Visas; Deportation; Asylum & Refugee 27540 Detroit Rd, Suite 202, Westlake, OH 44145 Phone:(440) 892-8846,Toll Free: 1-(888) 700-0073 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.jbidari.com Laxmi Groceries & Spices 6339 Olde York Road, Parma Heights, OH 44130 (Next to Udupi Cafe) Tel: 440-842-2402 Fax: 440842-2403 All Indian Groceries & Fresh Vegetables 5850 Mayfield Road, Mayfield Heights, Ohio-4412 Phone 440-461-9212, 440-461-9242. Fax 440 -745 – 6686 E-mail: [email protected] [email protected] We serve authentic Keralite cuisine using fine ingredients and family recipes passed down through the years. Great Takeout South Indian Food at Affordable Prices!!!! A few dishes from our menu list: Iddly (Four) with Sambar ....................... $3.99 Iddiyappam with Chickpea Curry.............. $3.99 Three Chapattis(Roti) with Veg.Curry........ $3.99 Vegetable Biriyani ................................. $5.49 Three Chapatti (Roti) with ChickenCurry.... $4.99 Iddiyappam with Chicken Curry................ $4.99 Chicken Biriyani .....................................$6.49 Fish (Kingfish) Curry .............................. $5.49 And more…….. We accept Ohio Food Stamps OPEN: Mon thru Fri: 10:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sat-Sun: 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. OCTOBER, 2011 INDIA INTERNATIONAL Please come and enjoy the taste of South India Please visit: www.tasteofkeralam.com PAGE 3 INDIA INTERNATIONAL VOLUME 10, NUMBER 8 OCTOBER, 2011 PUBLISHER & EDITOR Prakash N. Sinha Published by India International Inc. Business & Editorial office: 1801 East 12th Street Suite 1721 Cleveland, Ohio 44114 Phone: 216-781-4055 E-Mail: [email protected] Why India International ? India International is a secular and independent newspaper — a newspaper that doesn’t belong to any religious, political, social, cultural group or society, a newspaper that’s truly independent. It aims to create a better understanding between Asian-Indian Americans, other ethnic groups, and the mainstream American society. We believe that mutual understanding fosters friendship, harmony and peace. America is a beautiful mosaic of many cultures and faiths. AsianIndian Americans are all proud Americans and believe in American values — freedom, equality, tolerance, and respect for each other. Amid all its diversity in America, there is a unique unity that we aim to uphold and preserve. India International supports basic human values and upholds the dignity of all human beings – values that are above religion and politics. We believes in universal brotherhood ! India International seeks to promote close friendly relations between the United States and India, the two largest democracies. India International also seeks to help preserve and promote the precious Asian-Indian culture, heritage and values. And it seeks to uphold the pride and prestige of Asian-Indian Americans, as well as others’. India International is published monthly from Cleveland, Ohio, USA. It is distributed free in Greater Cleveland and surrounding areas. Yearly subscription is $10 for home delivery. Copyright 2011 India International Inc. Reproduction of any article, report or photograph without Editor’s written permission is prohibited. PAGE 4 India-US Cooperation Poised for Major Expansion in Education WASHINGTON: India-US cooperation in the field of education is poised for major expansion, Indian envoy to the US said ahead of the next week’s major summit between the two countries on the issue. “India-US cooperation in the field of education is today poised for major expansion,” Nirupama Rao, Indian Ambassador to the US, said at Yale University in her talk on “Future Direction in India-US relations” September 24. “We in India see education as critical for achieving its goals to have inclusive growth and to realise the potential for taking the Indian economy to even higher growth trajectory,” she said. The Ambassador said that India has announced major initiatives for massive expansion and upgradation of the education infrastructure, both in the primary education sector and also in the higher education. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and India’s Human Resource Minister Kapil Sibal would attend the India-US Higher Education Summit on October 13. “The Summit will bring together not just government officials but also academics and entrepreneurs who are engaged in this area and will provide a platform to develop a blueprint for furthering our horizons in this area,” Rao said. Yale, she said, has had a historical connection with India that goes back more than three centuries beginning with Eliahu Yale and his days in Madras (now Chennai). Yale has been a pioneer among the US universities when it comes to the study of India its languages, literature, religions, history, and its politics, economics and society. “I understand Yale was the first US University to start teaching Sanskrit. Many eminent Indians and Indian-Americans have passed through its portals. Yale is today not only continuing its tradition of engagement but has strengthened it and extensively broadened it through the Yale India Initiative that was launched in 2008,” she said. India US relationship, she said, is a partnership that seeks to meet common aspirations for mutual prosperity and for peace and security. Many NRIs Heading Back Home NEW DELHI: Faced with declining salaries and job cuts abroad, an increasing number of NRI professionals are moving back to India in search of greener pastures, a move that will give homegrown companies a chance to tap this attractive resource pool. According to a study by MyHiringClub.com, a recruitment tendering platform, hiring of nonresident Indians (NRIs) back in India will account for 19 per cent of total recruitment activity during OctoberDecember this year, compared to 11 per cent in the year-ago period, representing a growth of 8 per cent. Hiring of NRIs accounted for 21 per cent of total recruitment activity during April-June, 2011. “The high economic growth in India, with many good opportunities, has fuelled the NRI thought process to head back. In addition to that, many Indian companies are shutting their offices in the West,” MyHiringClub.com CEO Rajesh Kumar said. However, “It is not only the major crisis in the West, but also a combination of economic, social and other factors that has driven this,” he said. The segments that will witness the maximum NRI recruitment during the period under review include IT and ITES, followed by automobiles, manufacturing and engineering, banking and financial services, infrastructure, telecom, FMCG and retail. The survey, conducted among 429 corporate and 710 recruitment consultants, said appointment of NRIs will rise by 9 per cent in the IT and ITES space during the third quarter of the 2012 fiscal vis-a-vis the year-ago period. Similarly, hiring in the automobiles, manufacturing and engineering sector will grow by 8 per cent, while NRI recruitment will be up 4 per cent in the banking and financial services space. In terms of cities, the IT hub of Bangalore will see the maximum growth in NRI recruitment activity, followed by Mumbai, Delhi and Hyderabad. Among NRI job seekers, those having work experience of 1-5 years have the maximum chance (52 per cent) of getting hired in India, while job seekers with experience of 5-10 years have a 28 per cent chance. NRI job seekers with experience of more than 15 years have only a 5 per cent chance of recruitment. Looking ahead, the survey said, “An increasing number of high value NRI professional recruitment is likely to take place in the coming quarter, as wage gaps have declined sharply. An increasing number of people is now returning because now the advantages of returning back to India outweigh the disadvantages by far.” One in six Americans Below Poverty Line WASHINGTON: One in six Americans is now living below poverty line, the Census Bureau said in a report, reflecting the adverse impact of economic crisis on the common man. “The nation’s official poverty rate in 2010 was 15.1 per cent, up from 14.3 per cent in 2009 the third consecutive annual increase in the poverty rate,” US Census Bureau said in its report. “There were 46.2 million people in poverty in 2010, up from 43.6 million in 2009 - the fourth consecutive annual increase and the largest number in the 52 years for which poverty estimates have been published,” it said. These findings are contained in the report ‘Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2010.’ The government defines the poverty line as income of $22,314 a year for a family of four and $11,139 for an individual. The number of people without health insurance coverage rose from 49.0 million in 2009 to 49.9 million in 2010, while the percentage without coverage 16.3 per cent - was not statistically different from the rate in 2009. Since 2007, the year before the most recent recession, real median household income has declined 6.4 per cent and is 7.1 per cent below the median household income peak that occurred prior to the 2001 recession in 1999 Better US-India Ties Rao Lauds Indian Americans’ Vital Role Nirupama Rao, India’s newly appointed Ambassador to US, was speaking duirng a reception organised in her honour by the USIndia Business Council in Washington DC last month. WASHINGTON: Indian Ambassador to the US Nirupama Rao has parised Indian Americans for playing a key role in shaping the strategic partnership between the world’s two leading democracies. “You have contributed and played a significant role in crafting US-India partnership; strategic partnership between the world’s two leading democracies; this defining relationship that has the capability to impact the destiny of the 21st century,” she said. Rao was addressing the IndianAmerican community of the Washington DC Metropolitan area who had organized a welcome reception for her. “I particularly recall your role in the successful realization of India-US civil nuclear agreement and the zeal and the enthusiasm with which you supported it - the passage of the deal in the United States Congress,” Rao said. “Your accomplishments and achievements as a community has caught the imagination of this country... this is because of the reputation you have established, discipline, diligence and determination to succeed,” she said, urging the community to work towards even bigger and better ties between the two countries. “You can play a crucial role in interpreting India’s priorities to your American brethren. You can be that bridge of understating and friendship between India and the United States,” Rao said. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Alyssa Ayres also applauded the role played by the IndianAmerican community in strengthening the relationship between the two countries, and added that the State Department is working on initiatives to realize the full potential of the Indian-American community. Support a child’s education in India: visit www.ashanet.org INDIA INTERNATIONAL OCTOBER, 2011 W hatever you can Good deeds are the best do or dream you prayer. –Serbian proverb can, begin it. Boldness has genius, magic and power in it. Begin it now. –Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe A creative man is motivated by the desire to achieve, not by the desire to beat others. –Ayn Rand Act as if what you do makes a difference. It does. –William James Critchfield, Critchfield & Johnston A fool flatters himself, a wise man flatters the fool. –Edward Lytton A good head and a good heart are always a formidable combination. –Nelson Mandela 4996 Foote Road, Medina, Ohio 44256 Fax: 330-721-7644 A firm of attorneys practicing in North East Ohio with four law offices throughout the region. Winners never quit and quitters never win. –Vince Lombardi Follow Your Dream... Compiled by Aditi Sinha Practice areas include: Immigration; Litigation; Creditor Rights and Collections Better to do something imperfectly than to do nothing flawlessly. –Robert Schuller “I claim to be no more than an average man with less than average abilities. I have not the shadow of a doubt that any man or woman can achieve what I have, if he or she would make the same effort and cultivate the same hope and faith.” –Mahatma Gandhi (October 2, 1869–January 30, 1947) Providing quality legal services for your business or personal needs for over 79 years. Duriya Dhinojwala, Esq. www.ccj.com [email protected] Phone: 330-723-6404 (Ext. 518) Gandhi Quiz 1) When was Mohandas Gandhi born? a) 21 March, 1861 b) 2 October, 1869 c) 14 November, 1889 d) 19 January, 1900 2) Where was Mohandas Gandhi born? a) Ahmedabad b) Rajkot c) Porbandar d) Junagadh 3) Which of the following plays left a deep impression on Gandhiji? a) Harishchandra b) Shravana Kumar c) Both (a) and (b d) Shakuntala 4) Who of the following desired to convert Gandhiji to Christianity in South Africa? a) A. W. Baker b) Mrs. MacDonald c) William Godfrey d) Spencer Walton 5. In the course of resistance against which of the following in South Africa did Gandhiji first use his new political weapon which came to be known later on as ‘Satyagraha’? a) Peace Preservation Ordinance b) Natal Indenture Law c) Asiatic Law Amendment Act d) Immigrants Regulation Act 6) Which book did Mohandas Gandhi write? a) Discovery of India b) The Story of My Experiments with Truth c) Geetanjali d) The Good Earth OCTOBER, 2011 Nationwide 7) Where was Mohandas Gandhi for most of the time during 1893-1914? He came back to India in 1914. a) USA b) UK c) South Africa d) Australia Health Care, LLC 6325 York Road, Suite 101, Parma Hts. OH 44130 Ph:440-888-8888Fx:440-888-8895 W hen you, your friend or neighbor are living in own house or apartment and not willing to live in a nursing home, but still need assistance contact our company. Our Nurses and Home Health Aides can help you through a difficult period in your life. Home Health Aide services include: personal care, homemaker services, meal preparation, shopping and light housekeeping. 8) In which year was the Salt March? a) 1918 b) 1922 c) 1930 d) 1939 N O W H I R I N G: Home Health Aide We are currently hiring Home Health Aides to provide health care at patient’s home. When your family members, friends or neighbor needed care you can help them in their house and have extra income. We offer: Competitive pay; medical insurance for full-time employee, great working environment; flexible work hour’s opportunities to expand your skills; good benefits; management that cares about you. 9) Where is Sabarmati Ashram? a) Ahmedabad b) Baroda c) Rajkot d) Bulsar 10) When did Gandhi die? a) 15 August 1947 b) 20 January 1948 c) 30 January 1948 d) 26 January 1950 Please contact our Representatives: Ms. Gothai Jayaraj, Indian Volunteer, 216-661-7550 Ms. LeHang Truong, Asian Liaison, TEL: 614-668-2065 E-mail: [email protected] (Answers on Page 15) More Words of Wisdom from Gandhi... “Nobody can hurt me without my permission.” “There is nothing that wastes the body like worry, and one who has any faith in God should be ashamed to worry about anything whatsoever.” “The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.” “The Roots of Violence: Wealth without work, Pleasure without conscience, Knowledge without character, Commerce without morality, Science without humanity, Worship without sacrifice, Politics without principles” “Men often become what they believe themselves to be. If I believe I cannot do something, it makes me incapable of doing it. But when I believe I can, then I acquire the ability to do it even if I didn’t have it in the beginning.” Asian Imports Groceries and Food from India 26885 Brookpark Extn., North Olmsted, Ohio 44070 440-777-8101 Indian Groceries and Food Indian Pickles & Spices Exotic Icecream & Drinks Frozen Foods & Breads Fresh Vegetables Indian Dresses and Jewelry We accept Food Stamps Tuesday-Saturday: 10:30 - 7:30; Sunday: 10:30 - 5:30 Monday Closed INDIA INTERNATIONAL PAGE 5 COMMUNITY NEWS ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Asha Needs and Deserves Community Support A sha for Education (Asha) is a nonp r o f i t organization established in 1991, focused on catalyzing socioeconomic change in India through education of the underprivileged. Since 2001, it has disbursed over $20 million to hundreds of projects in India. By pioneering bold new initiatives in the field of education, Asha is making a difference in the lives of underprivileged children in India. The Cleveland chapter of Asha for Education (AshaCleveland), was conceived in 1996 by students at Case Western Reserve University, and currently comprises a diverse mix of motivated students and professionals. Asha-Cleveland will be organizing its biggest fundraising activity for the year with its annual charity concert “Notes of Hope”, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to watch flute maestro Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia mesmerize Cleveland. It will be held on October 29, 2011 at the Cuyahoga Community College (Tri-C), Metro campus’ auditorium. Pt. Chaurasia will be accompanied by Subhankar Banerjee on the tabla and Jay Gandhi on the assisting flute. Tickets for the show are priced at $30, $50, $75 and $100. To make this event a grand success, Asha is requesting Patron Sponsorships from both individuals and businesses, as the funds raised will go a long way in helping Asha support its projects in India. All contributions are taxexempt under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3). Additionally, Patron Sponsors will receive an exclusive (and limited to a few only) invitation to dinner with the artists, along with complimentary concert tickets. For further information, please visit http:/ /hpc-cle.info/ or contact us at (216) 586-5485. Asha’s “Work an Hour (WAH)” effort was a summerlong, global, online fundraising campaign, based on a simple concept where participants symbolically work an hour towards the cause of education by donating an hour’s worth or more of their salary. This year, Asha-Cleveland supported the Siragu Montessori School in Chennai, as its flagship project for this campaign. The school was founded in 2003, for rehabilitating and providing quality Montessoribased education for 34 children who were earlier begging on the streets. Today the school comprises over 35 staff, taking care of over 400 students, with 175 of them staying in-house at the school premises. The wholesome education provided has yielded tremendous results, with children now participating in international competitions, such as Science Olympiads and Spelling Bees, clearly illustrating their “transformation of IMPOSSIBLE to I-AMPOSSIBLE”. Asha raised $4,500 (at the time of writing) towards the construction of a new classroom, as well as lab supplies and apparatuses. To learn more about this year ’s WAH campaign or donate to Siragu, please visit h t t p : / / w w w. a s h a n e t . o r g / workanhour/2011/projects/ siragu.html or http://bit.ly/ ASHACLE. “Team Asha” in Cleveland, comprising Anshuman, Partha, Lavanya, Amit, Sohani, Aparna, Amith, and Ram, conquered the Akron Marathon on September 24, 2011, with Akshat and Siri successfully completing the halfmarathon. Team Asha Cleveland (front row) with a blind dance group show at an Asha fundraiser in Cleveland. These inspirational trailblazers ran to raise awareness about Asha and its activities, while raising funds ($4,000 at the time of writing) for Asha projects, training through the summer on a strict regimen. Every step they ran gave them the supreme joy of a progressive step towards promoting the education of less-privileged children in India, in addition to enjoying the magical benefits of keeping themselves fit. The continuous support and encouragement of various donors and wellwishers went a long way in helping them achieve their goals, and cross the finishline in glory! You may visit the Asha Marathon home page at http://www.ashanet.org/ cleveland/home/marathon/ team.php to read more about each runner and to make a contribution to Team Asha. Asha is grateful for the support and encouragement from the community, said the volunteers. if you would like to know more about the Team Asha, their events and activities, please contact them at [email protected] or visit http://www.ashanet.org/ cleveland/ Flavors of India Under New Management Featuring Himalayan Cusine Only Indian Restaurant serving Dumpling (Momo) 26703 Brook Park Rd. Ext., North Olmsted, OH 44070 Ph: 440-779-5774, Fax: 440-779-7433 Lunch Buffet: Tue.-Fri. 11:30 am- 3pm: Only $ 7.95 (more than 20 items) Lunch Buffet: Sat.- Sun. 12-3 pm: Only $ 10.95 (more than 24 items) Dinner: Tue- Sat. 5 PM - 10Pm; Sun. 5Pm - 9 Pm. 1SPPGUIBUJUSFBMMZEPFT QBZUPCFTNBSU 5IF4NBSU3BUF"EKVTUBCMF.PSUHBHF Carryout and Catering for all occasions. 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Library customers can now download popular and classic eBooks to a Kindle® device or any mobile device running the free Kindle app, such as iPhone®, iPad®, Android™ and more. To get started, visit the Library’s online Digital Media Catalog at: http:// ebcd.cuyahogalibrary.org. Cuyahoga County Public Library also offers eBooks and eAudiobooks for use on a PC or Mac computer and popular mobile devices such as a Smartphone, MP3 player, and eBook reader like the Barnes & Noble® Nook™ and Sony® Reader. The Digital Media Catalog allows the Library’s customers to access digital materials 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Customers can check out and borrow the Library’s digital materials using their library card or user ID. OCTOBER, 2011 Digital materials can be renewed just like a book or DVD, and they never incur library fines. When the borrowing period ends, the eBook simply disappears from the customer’s device. Cuyahoga County Public Library partners with the Cleveland-based company OverDrive, Inc. to offer this service. About Cuyahoga County Public Library: Cuyahoga County Public Library consistently ranks as one of the nation’s ten busiest and best library systems. Its 28 branches serve 47 communities. The Library’s mission is to be at the center of community life by providing an environment where reading, lifelong learning and civic engagement thrive. For further information, visit www.cuyahogalibrary.org. HOUSE NORTH SOLON For Sale or Possible Lease 5066 Cheswick 4BR 2.5 ba. split-level Excellent condition Beautiful ex. rm. w. hot tub. $299,500.00 By appt. only Brokers welcome (440) 318-4234 COMMUNITY NEWS Rao K. Garuda, CLU, ChFC Twenty-first Century Trusted Advisor Associated Concepts Agency Inc. First Financial Resources L.L.C. 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Investment Advisor Representative of and Advisory Services Offered through QA3 Financial LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Advisor, Associated Concepts Agency, Inc or First Financial Resources is not affiliated with QA3 Financial Corp., or QA3 Financial LLC INDIA INTERNATIONAL PAGE 7 Bindiya Decor (A subsidiary of Jamish Corp.) 4851 West Erie Avenue, Lorain, OH 44053 Tel: 440-282-5090, Cell: 440-773-1114, Toll Free: 1888-854-9547 E-Mail: [email protected] Learn Singing Hindustani Classical Music With Noted Vocalist Sugata Chatterjee (Also giving lessons at Tri-C) Contact 440-892-9611 [email protected] www.sugatachatterjee.com www.bindiyadecor.com Try the Rest & Come to the Best For Your Memorable Wedding Celebration, Call Mukesh Desai 440-773-1114 Ohio’s Largest Selections of Wedding Mandap, Mehndi & Sangeet Decorations W e also c a r r y traditional and designer sarees (including south Indian sarees), punjabi suits, & jewelry. Please call: 440-364-2982 Aapke ghar ke deep hamesha roshan rahein. MetLife wishes you and your family a Happy Diwali. As you share the traditions of this special day with your children, also look ahead and ensure that their future remains bright. MetLife has been helping families for over 140 years to pass down financial protection to their loved ones. So speak to one of our dedicated South Asian representatives in your community. They can help you fill your home with the spirit of Diwali for many years to come. Ranjan Jagetia, CPA, MBA Financial Services Representative Financial Planner 21891 Forbes Road Oakwood Village, OH 44146 440-786-3758 [email protected] Aapki zindagi mein aapke saath Guarantees are subject to product terms, exclusions and limitations and are based on the insurer’s claims-paying ability and financial strength. Products are issued by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 200 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10166, and by MetLife Investors USA Insurance Company, 5 Park Plaza, Suite 1900, Irvine, CA 92614 and in New York, only by First MetLife Investors Insurance Company, 200 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10166 (collectively referred to as “MetLife”). November 2010. ©2011 Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. L1010135106[exp1211][All States][DC] ©2011 PNTS 1105-1649 Page 8 INDIA INTERNATIONAL – OCTOBER, 2011 Why advertise in India International ? Because 10,000 People Read it Every Month !! INDIA INTERNATIONAL – OCTOBER, 2011 Page 9 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ COMMUNITY NEWS – Cleveland, USA ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ October Programs at Brahma Kumaris Center T he Brahma Kumaris peace center in Akron is looking forward to the colorful changes of inner vibrancy this fall. From the Peace Village in New York, Sr. Mary Friedland will come to share practical tools for a tension-free life, one that is full of light, lightness, beauty and grace. She will be coming at the auspicious time of Diwali and there will be two special programs to celebrate awakening our own inner light and power. All are welcome and also to bring friends to these programs. Please RSVP by October 15 to Sister Kristina, Director of BK Center in Akron: 234.678.9200 or [email protected]. There will be a World Peace Meditation Hour on October 16. The Foundation Course in Raja Yoga Meditation will begin October 11 at 7pm. Please call for more details. Nurturing the Innocent Child, a special program for Mothers & Women: As Mothers, women spend a lot of time caring for others. Increasing their contentment, fulfillment and inner joy makes life more satisfying and overflows to all those around us. Learn the art from Sr. Mary. Saturday, October 22nd, 4-6:30 p.m. Tea & Refreshments served. Ignite your Inner Light and Lightness this Diwali: Every year we celebrate the festival of lights. It holds a special significance in our hearts. Join us as Sr. Mary shares with us how to light up our lives and the world through a love link with the Supreme and make everyday a true Diwali. Sunday, October 23rd, 7-8:30p.m. World Peace Meditation Hour: The third Sunday of each month, the Brahma Kumaris conduct an hour of World Peace Meditation across the globe. Sunday October 16th, 6:157:45p.m. Laughing for a Cause at AAIWO Fundraiser Global Cleveland partners with Ohio Board of Regents for new program Pilot Program to Help Foreign Healthcare Professionals Begin a Career in U.S. Healthcare System CLEVELAND, Ohio – Global Cleveland, an organization focused on regional economic development through actively attracting and welcoming newcomers, has partnered with the Adult Basic and Literacy Education / English for Speakers of Other Languages (ABLE/ESOL) program of the Ohio Board of Regents and Polaris Career Center to launch a pilot program that will provide the guidance and support services necessary to fully capitalize on the talents of the region’s highly skilled immigrant population. The English and Pathways for Foreign Healthcare Professionals pilot program will help 25 immigrants with healthcare credentials, degrees or certificates from their native countries learn medical terminology and work-related English, access career support services, network with regional healthcare employers and earn basic life support (BLS) training and certification. In addition, participants will have the option to have their foreign credentials evaluated, verified and compared to Ohio licensing standards. This credentialing service will be offered to participants at a reduced rate and subsidized by Global Cleveland. The six-month program will be held at Cleveland State University beginning on October 22. In order to qualify for the program, participants must have intermediate English proficiency in reading, writing, speaking and/or listening skills; have a foreign healthcare degree or credential; and be a permanent resident or U.S. citizen. Interested participants may sign up for the class by calling Denise Friend at 440-570-9417. “There are a number of welltrained and qualified foreign healthcare professionals in this region who are working jobs that don’t match their skill set,” said Larry Miller, president of Global Cleveland. “This pilot program is designed to help these highly skilled immigrants improve their English proficiency skills and explore academic and career opportunities that could lead to employment in their field of expertise.” For more information about Global Cleveland or the English and Pathways for Foreign Healthcare Professionals pilot program, visit globalcleveland.org. About Global Cleveland ( w w w.globalcleveland.org): Global Cleveland is a civic organization committed to regional economic development by actively attracting newcomers, welcoming and connecting them both economically and socially to the many opportunities throughout Greater Cleveland. The initiative has raised more than $1 million in funding from Huntington Bank, Forest City Enterprises, The Cleveland Foundation, Jewish Federation of Cleveland, The Maltz Foundation and The George Gund Foundation. Indian Americans to Stage Protest Against Indian Govt. in New York on Oct 16 Ben and Jaya The fundraiser of the Association of Asian Indian Women of Ohio (September 9, 2011) proved to be so celebratory that guests may have been guilty of forgetting the reason for the comedy/dinner night, which was to aid women in need in the Asian-Indian community. Much praise goes to AAIWO president Margaret Gonsalves and her group of trusty committee members, who put together a spectacular night of riotous comedy, delicious Indian food, and wild dancing. Tadka banquet hall provided the right food and venue for an evening that was enjoyed by all. The two comedians, Ben and Jaya Bidari, proved to be an unusual combination, provoking raucous laughter from a predominantly Asian Indian audience. Ben, half Puerto Rican and half Arab but fully “brown,” was able to connect with an Indian crowd with a series of jokes centering on their common “brownness.” The racially charged yet hilarious commentary evoked loud laughter. His anecdote about dating an Indian girl in high school and being vetted PAGE 10 by her father by handing over his report card was hilarious as was his series of jokes about his other girlfriend whom he fondly referred to as his 401K!!! Jaya Bidari’s understated approach slowly drew the crowd in as they identified with their common cultural predicament and mishaps. Her charm is her unusual comedy style, politely Indian and subdued, till she pulverizes her audience with an unexpected bold, linguistically Western punch line. Her quiet confidence has never stopped amazing her Indian women friends! Following the comedy event, all emceed by the talented Batra, was an opulent dinner, with a variety of meat and vegetable preparations, hot and spicy like the comedy event that preceded it. The silent auction peddled interesting gifts of wine, art, and plants, with the crowning glory being a hot air balloon ride! The evening was filled with laughter and good cheer, but all were acutely aware of the silent shifting computer screen backdrop to the event, reminding them that they were laughing for a cause. NEW YORK: The Indian American community will organize a protest demonstration here on October 16 against corruption and against the harassment being meted out to Janata Party president Dr. Subramanian Swamy in India. A press release issued by Save India From Corruption said that the protest is being organized to express disgust and abhorrence against the unwarranted harassment of Dr. Swamy, a former cabinet minister, who has emerged as the embodiment of resistance against totalitarian and corrupt system. “The anti-corruption movement in India is the result of Dr. Swamy’s efforts started as far back as 2008. He is the one person out of 1.2 billion who could nail many of the culprits of the $40 billion 2G scam, from Raja, Kanimozhi and many others,” the release said. The release further accused India’s Home Minister P. Chidambaram and the Crime Branch of the Delhi Police of registering a ‘false’case against Dr. Swamy. “Dr. Swamy cannot be cowed down by adopting vindictive attitude or dictatorial techniques. In a recent poll conducted in The Times of India, 81 percent of the people said that Dr. Swamy is being targeted by the UPA Government for his role in the 2G spectrum scam case.” “In addition to filing frivolous FIRs, the government refuses to act on his request for housing him in a safer environment in New Delhi to protect from Congress goons and Jihadists.” The release said that Dr. Swamy had come under attack on three different occasions between 2008 and 2011 in Chennai, Madurai and New Delhi. It claimed that India is neither a banana republic nor a fiefdom of some dynasty. It is a full-fledged democracy in which freedom of diverse views is constitutionally guaranteed. It said that Dr. Swamy is being hounded by governmental agencies for writing an article three months ago in which he had appealed to all the Hindus to unite against the biggest threat to and challenge of the world — Islamic terrorism. GOPIO Convention Nov. 18-20 in NJ The Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO International) invites everyone to attend and participate at GOPIO’s Biennial International Convention 2011scheduled to be held in Iselin, New Jersey, USA from November 18 - 20, 2011. GOPIO’s conference on November 19, 2011 will evaluate, assess, debate, discuss and deliberate on the current, critical issues of interest and concern that confront persons of Indian origin of more than 25 million people living in many countries outside of India. The overall theme is “Issues and Concerns of the Indian Diaspora” and will examine issues of: Consular services, property, taxation and related issues; NRI marriages and abuses of marriage laws; issues related to health, women and youth; challenges and opportunities for political and economic empowerment and successful adaptation in adopted countries. For more information and registration, please contact Dr Piyush Agrawal, General Convener at [email protected] (tel +1-954-648-6494) Arvind Sood, Co-Convener at [email protected] (tel +1-732-277-6313) Dr Rajeev Mehta, Co-Convener at [email protected] (tel +1-732-463-7929) INDIA INTERNATIONAL OCTOBER, 2011 CENSUS 2010 ~ US Census Takes Place Every Ten Years Countywise Population of Asian Indians in Northeast Ohio as of April 1, 2010 G reater Cleveland is a nickname for the metropolitan area surrounding Cleveland. Northeast Ohio refers to a similar but substantially larger area. One organization states that Northeast Ohio consists of 16 counties (Ashland, Ashtabula, Carroll, Columbiana, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Mahoning, Medina, Portage, Richland, Stark, Summit, Trumbull and Wayne counties) and includes the cities of Cleveland, Akron, Canton, Lorain, Elyria, Medina, Ashtabula, Youngstown, and Warren. Additional counties are often (but not always) considered to be in Northeast Ohio. These locations include Erie, Holmes, Huron and Tuscarawas counties. Countywise Asian-Indian population in Northeast Ohio: 1. Ashland ........... 44 2. Ashtabula ........ 69 3. Columbia ...... .. 50 4. Carroll ............. 5 5. Cuyahoga... 11,778 6. Geauga ...... 156 7. Lake ............ 998 8. Lorain ......... 751 9. Mahoning ... 564 10. Medina ........ 532 11. Portage ........ 676 12. Richland ...... 264 13. Stark ............. 855 14. Summit ....... 3,727 15. Trumbull .... 311 16. Wayne ........ 226 Total ..... 21, 006 17. Erie ............... 78 18. Huron ............ 27 19. Holmes .......... 7 20. Tuscarawas .... 68 Total 180 20 counties Grand Total .... 21,186 OCTOBER, 2011 Asian Indian Population in US Rises Almost 70 % A sian Indian population in the United States increased almost 70 percent during the last decade, as their numbers shot up dramatically from 1,678,765 in 2000 to 2,843,391 in 2010, an increase of 69.37 percent. Indians are approaching one percent of the U.S. total population, which totaled 308.7 million in 2010, according to recently released U.S. 2010 Census data. In 25 states in America, mainly in the South and Midwest, Indians are now the largest Asian subgroup. These states are: New Jersey, Texas, Illinois, Florida, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Maryland, Michigan, Ohio, North Carolina, Connecticut, Arizona, Alabama, Tennessee, Indiana, South Carolina, Kentucky, Missouri, West Virginia, Hew Hampshire, Delaware, North Dakota, Iowa and Arkansas. (The “other Asian” category had a slightly larger total than Asian Indians in Iowa and Arkansas, but when the “Other Asian” is broken down by racial groups, Indian Americans are the largest Asian subgroup in those two states as well.) While California had the most Indian American residents in 2010, 528,176, and New York was second at 313,620, Indians have their higher percentage as a ratio of a state’s total population in New Jersey. There are now 292,256 Asian Indians, as the Census Bureau terms Indian Americans, in New Jersey, 3.3 percent of the state’s total population. Indian Americans in New Jersey numbered just 169,180 in 2000, so their number has increased almost 73 percent. The next states after the top three with the largest numbers of Indian Americans in 2010 were: Texas, 245,981; Illinois, 188,328, Florida, 128,735; Virginia, 103,916, Pennsylvania, 103,026; Georgia, 96,116; Maryland, 79,051; Massachusetts, 77,177; Michigan, 77,132; Ohio, 64,187; Washington, 61,124; and North Carolina, 57,400. The “Asian only” population in the U.S. increased from 10,242,998 to 14,674,252 in the decade, a 43.3 percent jump, more than four times the total U.S. rate of 9.7 percent. Asians constituted 4.2 percent of the nation’s population in 2000 and 4.8 percent in 2010. The total number of Asians of one race or in combination with one or more races was 11,898,828 in 2000. Indian Americans not only had the highest percentage increase of any of the major Asian American groups in the U.S., they also had the largest increase in raw numbers. Chinese, the largest Asian group in the U.S., went from 2,432,585 residents in 2000 to 3,347,229 in 2010. Filipinos dropped from the second largest Asian group in the U.S. in 2000 to the third largest in 2010, increasing from 1,850,351 residents to 2,555,923 in the decade. Vietnamese widened their lead over Koreans as the fourth largest Asian group in 2000 in the U.S. Vietnamese now number 1,548,449, up from 1,122,528 in 2000. Koreans increased from 1,076,872 to 1,423,784 in the period. The Japanese population in the U.S., which has the highest average age level among all Asian groups, fell in population from 796,700 to 763,325 during the decade. Factors, besides an aging population, that could contribute to the loss in the Japanese population could include a higher rate of intermarriage by Japanese than other Asian groups and fewer Japanese coming to the U.S. for study. The Indian American population increased due to several factors, some of them obvious and others less so. It is well known that Indians claimed many professional visas in the decade, particularly H-1Bs. India was also a leading source of foreign students from 2000-10. Many have stayed to continue their studies or to work in the country. Another factor is the growth of small businesses run by Indian Americans, particularly convenience stores, hotels and motels and in the health-related fields. Another factor that has contributed to an increase in the Indian American population is that many Indians who immigrated to the U.S. in the 1980s and 1990s have sponsored relatives under the family visas. The wait, in some cases, are seven years or more in some categories, so there is a steady stream of relatives coming to the U.S. in delayed pipelines. Also, since Indian Americans are the least likely of Asian groups in the U.S. to marry outside their ethnicity and race according to previous studies, Indians are less likely than the other Asian groups to have large numbers included in the category of “Other Asians,” which includes those of two or more race in addition to the less-populous Asian groups. World Population Day was July 11. This year, the world population reaches 7 billion. INDIA INTERNATIONAL Asian Indian Population in US 2000 Census 2010 Census California New York 360,392 296,056 528,176 313,620 New Jersey Texas 169,180 129,365 292,256 245,981 124,723 70,740 188,328 128 ,735 Virginia Pennsylvania 48,815 57,241 103,916 103,026 Georgia Maryland 46,132 49,909 96,116 79,051 Massachusetts Michigan 43,801 54,656 77,177 77,132 Ohio Washington 38,752 23,992 64,187 61,124 North Carolina Connecticut 26,197 23,662 57,400 46,415 Arizona Minnesota 14,741 16,887 36,047 33,031 Indiana Tennessee 14,865 12,835 27,598 23,900 Missouri Wisconsin 12,169 12,665 23,223 22,899 Colorado Oregon 11,720 9,575 20,369 16,740 South Carolina Kansas 8,856 8,153 15,941 13,848 Alabama Kentucky 6,900 6,771 13,036 12,501 Oklahoma Nevada 8,502 5,535 11,906 11,671 Delaware Louisiana 5,280 8,280 11,424 11,174 Iowa New Hampshire 5,641 3,873 11,081 8,268 Arkansas Utah 3,104 3,065 7,973 6,212 Nebraska Mississippi 3,273 3,827 5,903 5,494 Washington, D.C. Rhode Island 2,845 2,942 5,214 4,653 New Mexico Puerto Rico 3,104 4,550 3,523 West Virginia Hawaii 2,856 1,441 3,304 2,201 Idaho Maine 1,289 1,021 2,152 1,959 North Dakota Vermont 822 858 1,543 1,359 Alaska South Dakota 723 611 1,218 1,152 Montana Wyoming 379 354 618 589 State Illinois Florida Total Asian Indian population in the US 1,678,765 2,843,391 PAGE 11 CRICKET Cleveland Cricket Club are Midwest Champions Championship Team with Trophy ~ ~ ~ HEALTH ~ ~ ~ Benefits of Curry Leaf Curry leaf is an essential ingredient in Indian cooking, especially in South India. However, it’s customary for most of us to simply remove and throw the leaf from our food and not consume it. Well, you shouldn’t be doing that! Wonder why? Read on... Curry leaf has many medicinal properties. It stimulates digestive enzymes and helps break down food more easily. Have a glass of buttermilk mixed with a little hing (asafoetida) with a few curry leaves thrown in after meal for good digestion. - A good remedy for nausea and indigestion. Extract juice of curry leaves, squeeze lime and add a pinch of sugar. - Chew a few leaves every day to lose weight - Curry leaves are also known to improve eyesight, so make sure you do not throw away the leaves while eating. It is also believed to prevent cataract. - Curry leaves are also good for hair growth and color. If you don’t like its raw taste, you can buy the curry leaf powder widely available in the market and have it with dosa or hot rice. You can also make it at home. This will prevent premature greying of hair. - Alternatively, you can also add a few curry leaves to your hair oil and boil it for a few minutes, and then let cool down. Applying this hair tonic will keep your hair healthy. These are just a few of the many benefits that the curry leaves possess. Include this in your daily diet for better health. 12 Indian Foods that Cut Fat T he Midwest Cricket Tour (MCT) attracts about 32 teams from different parts of Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. Games are played in league round-robin format with each game being 35-overs a side following ICC rules and regulations. Starting this year, MCT has created two divisions (Division 1 and 2). Cleveland Cricket Club fielded CCC Warriors for Division 2 and they ended up topping their group, and reached the finals. THE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME: CCC Warriors faced University of Kentucky (UK) in the finals, played at Stubbs Park in Dayton, OH on September 18, 2011. Warriors won the toss and chose to bat. Davinder Pandher (Goldy) and Suhail Hasham opened the batting. Goldy as usual played some crisp shots but was caught behind. Mayank Mehta came in one-down, looked good but got a brilliant delivery to be caught behind. And soon Vignesh Palanivel, the manof-match from the semis, was given out LBW. Warriors were reduced to 40/3 in 12 overs. To make By Suhail Hasham matters worse, Sujay Ithychanda got runout, leaving Warriors in dire straits. Suhail was joined by Rahul Sarnobat, and they knew they had their tasks cut out. Both played sensible cricket, rotating the strike and dispatching the odd-bad balls. Excellent footwork against spinners meant UK was running out of ideas to break the partnership. The scoreboard rolled and Warriors marched ahead to about 125. Just when it looked like Warriors would start the final onslaught, Suhail lost his wicket trying to clear the rope. Suhail played a solid innings of 51. Rahul then combined with Sunny Hira to get some quick runs before Rahul was caught out for an excellent 42. From there on Sunny, Deepak, Basu, Sundeep and Bala took Warriors to a respectable 169 leaving UK a target of 170 to score in 35 overs. UK began the chase in an aggressive mode with their openers Vinod and Abhijeet taking them to about 55/0 in 12 overs. A great start by any means, especially in a final. Warriors were desperately searching for a break. That break came via a brilliant stumping by Bala off the bowling of Vignesh. That let Warriors into the door, and the spin trio (Vignesh, Sujay and Sunny) assisted by brilliant fielding, put the brakes on the scoring. The equation became runa-ball (UK needed 60 to get in about 10 overs with about 5 wickets in hand). Warriors used all their experience and skill to tighten the grip and eventually UK fell short by 35 runs. Goldy, Basu and Rahul took great catches. Sujay ended up with fantastic figures of 5-17 and also ended up winning “Man of the Match” for his excellent bowling. Cleveland Cricket Club has for long been a promoter of cricket in this region. CCC won the Michigan League championship for the last two years and this win in the MCT makes it a third champion-ship for CCC in as many years. Please visit http:// www.clevelandcricket.com for more details. You don’t have to acquire a taste for olive oil, seaweed or soya to maintain a low-fat, healthy diet. Indian cuisine can be healthy too, if it’s cooked with oil and ingredients that take care of your heart and health. Ayurveda suggests you include all tastes - sweet, sour, salty, pungent, bitter and astringent - in at least one meal each day, to help balance unnatural cravings. Here are 12 foods that can help you lose weight and gain health: Turmeric: Curcumin, the active component of turmeric, is an object of research owing to its properties that suggest they may help to turn off certain genes that cause scarring and enlargement of the heart. Regular intake may help reduce low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or bad cholesterol and high blood pressure, increase blood circulation and prevent blood clotting, helping to prevent heart attack. Cardamom : This is a thermogenic herb that increases metabolism and helps burn body fat. Cardamom is considered one of the best digestive aids and is believed to soothe the digestive system and help the body process other foods more efficiently. Chillies : Foods containing chillies are said to be as foods that burn fat. Chillies contain capsaicin that helps in increasing the metabolism. Capsaicin is a thermogenic food, so it causes the body to burn calories for 20 minutes after you eat the chillies. Curry leaves : Incorporating curry leaves into your daily diet can help you lose weight. These leaves flush out fat and toxins, reducing fat deposits that are stored in the body, as well as reducing bad cholesterol levels. If you are overweight, incorporate eight to 10 curry leaves into your diet daily. Chop them finely and mix them into a drink, or sprinkle them over a meal. Garlic : An effective fatburning food, garlic contains the sulphur compound allicin which has anti-bacterial effects and helps reduce cholesterol and unhealthy fats. Mustard oil : This has low saturated fat compared to other cooking oils. It has fatty acid, oleic acid, erucic acid and linoleic acid. It contains antioxidants, essential vitamins and reduces cholesterol, which is good for the heart. Cabbage : Raw or cooked cabbage inhibits the conversion of sugar and other carbohydrates into fat. Hence, it is of great value in weight reduction. Moong dal : The bean sprouts are rich in Vitamin A, B, C and E and many minerals, such as calcium, iron and potassium. It is recommended as a food replacement in many slimming programmes, as it has a very low fat content. It is a rich source of protein and fibre, which helps lower blood cholesterol level. The high fibre content yields complex carbohydrates, which aid digestion, are effective in stabilising blood sugar and prevent its rapid rise after meal consumption. Honey : It is a home remedy for obesity. It mobilises the extra fat deposits in the body allowing it to be utilised as energy for normal functions. One should start with about 10 grams or a tablespoon, taken with hot water early in the morning. Buttermilk : It is the somewhat sour, residual fluid that is left after butter is churned. The probiotic food contains just 2.2 grams of fat and about 99 calories, as compared to whole milk that contains 8.9 grams fat and 157 calories. Regular intake provides the body with all essential nutrients and does not add fats and calories to the body. It is thus helpful in weight loss. Millets : Fibre-rich foods such as millets - jowar, bajra, ragi, etc - absorb cholesterol and help increase the secretion of the bile that emulsifies fats. Cinnamon and cloves: Used extensively in Indian cooking, the spices have been found to improve the function of insulin and to lower glucose, total cholesterol, LDL and triglycerides in people with type 2 diabetes. (Mumbai Mirror) DID YOU KNOW ? India International is the largest and an independent Asian-Indian newspaper in Ohio Every month, more than 10,000 people read India International – printed and its online version (sent through email) It is your best connection to the 25,000-strong, educated, affluent Asian-Indian community in and around Greater Cleveland It is available at all branches of Cuyahoga County Public Library, all Indian temples, several Indian stores & restaurants in NE Ohio PAGE 12 INDIA INTERNATIONAL OCTOBER, 2011 Laughter is the shock absorber that eases the blows of life. Smart Mom A mother was walking with her four year old daughter one day when the daughter picked up something off the ground and started to put it into her mouth. The mother stopped her and said she shouldn’t do that. “Why,” asked the little girl. “Because it’s dirty. It’s been on the ground. You don’t know where it’s been. It probably has germs.” The little girl looked up at her mom with admiration and asked, “How do you know so much?” Thinking quickly, the mother said, “All moms know so much. We have to. It’s on the Mommy Test. If you don’t know it, you don’t get to be a mommy.” The little girl pondered this for a few minutes, then her face brightened. “I get it!” she said. “If you don’t pass the test, you get to be a daddy!” “Yup,” said the mom. The Water Pistol I’m so poor I can’t even pay attention! ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ Good Old Days After being married 25 years, a man looked at his wife one day and said, “You know, 25 years ago we lived in a cheap apartment, drove a cheap car, had only a sofa bed and watched a 14” black and white television. BUT, every night I got to sleep with a hot 25 year old blonde.” “Now,” he continued, “We have a nice house, a new car, a big flat-screen TV, but I have to sleep with a 50 year old woman. It doesn’t seem fair.” His wife was a reasonable woman. She replied, “Well, why don’t you go out and get yourself a hot 25 year old blonde? Then I’ll make sure you will once again live in a cheap apartment, drive a cheap car, have only a sofa bed and watch a 14" black and white television.” The man rethought his priorities. Heart Attack After suffering a heart attach and having quadruple bypass surgery, a man woke up to find himself in a Christian hospital with nuns taking care of him. As they nursed him back to health, one of the nuns asked him if he had health insurance. “No,” he replied, “No health insurance.” “Do you have any money in the bank?” asked the nun. “No. No money in the bank.” The nun asked, “Do you have any relatives you could ask for help?” The man replied, “I only have a spinster sister, who is a nun.” At this the nun became irritated. “Nuns are not spinsters. Nuns are married to God!” “OK, then,” said the man, “Send the bill to my brother-in-law.” My five year old son squealed with delight when he opened his birthday present from his grandmother. It was a water pistol. He promptly ran to the sink to fill it. “Mom,” I said. I’m surprised at you. “Don’t you remember how we used to drive you crazy with water pistols?” My mom smiled and said, “Yes, I remember.” Good Hearing Having lost most of his hearing a number of years ago, this elderly man goes to the doctor to be fitted with hearing aids which promise to allow him to hear 100%. A month later, he returns to the doctor for a check up on his progress. The doctor tells him that his hearing is perfect and asks if his family is pleased. The man says, “Oh, I haven’t told them about the hearing aids yet. I just sit around and listen to them talk. I’ve changed my will three times!” Saying Goodbye to a Trusted Friend M y wife, Malathi, and I recently bought a new minivan, trading in the 2000 Subaru Legacy Wagon that had served us well for nine years. As we were leaving the Honda dealership in our sparkling white minivan, my 7-year-old daughter, Divya, stuck her head out toward the parked Subaru and waved. “Bye, car! Thank you, car!” she said. It wasn’t the first time one of us had spoken to the Subaru. When we bought it second-hand in 2002, Malathi had trouble learning to drive a stickshift (manual) car. As she took her foot off the clutch pedal too quickly, the car would jerk forward and stall. “Go! Go! Go!” Malathi would yell, but the car couldn’t seem to grasp this simple instruction. Being a good husband, I tried to be helpful: “It’s a Japanese car. What’s the Japanese word for ‘go’?” But after Malathi’s initial words to the car, I don’t recall any of us OCTOBER, 2011 talking to it until Divya’s parting words. I hate to admit this publicly, but we didn’t even give it a name. We just referred to it as “the car” –- as though it didn’t have an identity of its own, as though it was exactly like all the other Subarus. Just ask any mechanic and he will tell you that no two cars in the world are exactly alike. “Your car is definitely unique,” he will say, “and it has a unique problem that will take me many hours to fix.” And pretty soon you will have a unique bill to pay. “You charged me for an exhaust pipe, exhaust gasket and exhaust clamp,” you say, looking at the items on the bill. “But why did you charge me for exhaust fluid?” “Sorry,” says the mechanic. “I was exhausted and needed a drink.” Our Subaru certainly had some unique qualities. For example, if I made a sharp U-turn, it would produce a popping sound. I used Google Translate and found out what it was saying: “Make up your mind where LIFE CAN BE SO FUNNY ! Melvin Durai is a Winnipeg-based writer and humorist. Born in India and raised in Zambia, he has lived in North America since 1982. Through the Internet, his column is read by thousands of people in more than 90 countries. Read his previous columns at www.melvindurai.com Write to Melvin [email protected] The Humor of Melvin Durai you’re going, you idiot!” If I went over a bump too fast, it would make a deep vibrating sound, which Google also translated for me: “Time to get your eyes checked, you moron!” But despite its occasional complaints, it was a good, reliable car, one that we shamelessly took for granted. Even when it had carried us safely on a 30- hour trip, we didn’t have the decency to give it a pat on its bumper. If it was dirty and needed a bath, I waited for a rainy day and tossed it a bar of soap. And when it came to feeding it, I was always slow to do so, waiting until the gauge showed empty, not feeling any remorse if the warning light came on, saying “Feed me, dude. I’m not a model!” If you enjoyed this piece, you’ll love Melvin’s humourous novel “Bala Takes the Plunge,” available in North America through Amazon.com and McNallyRobinson.com INDIA INTERNATIONAL I may have neglected the car now and then, but I never intentionally abused it in any way, either verbally or physically, even when it was at fault. When its battery died and it wouldn’t start one morning, I didn’t kick its tires and scream, “Stupid car! Why didn’t you remind me to turn your lights off?” When it almost crashed into a building while Malathi was at the wheel, I didn’t punch its headlights out and shout, “Stupid car! Why didn’t you tell her that her foot was on the accelerator, not the brake!” I always felt a sense of loyalty to the car and was reluctant to part with it. That’s why I was pleasantly surprised to hear Divya’s words of gratitude. While the rest of the family was excited about the new minivan, she had taken a moment to appreciate the old car. I should have done the same: “Good bye car! Thank you for keeping us safe. We’ll miss you. I hope your new owner speaks Japanese.” Riddle Corner Compiled by Aditi Sinha 1. If three cats catch three mice in three minutes, how many cats would be needed to catch 100 mice in 100 minutes? 2. A tree doubled in height each year until it reached its maximum height in 20 years. How many years did it take this tree to reach half its maximum height? 3. The word, “Twelfths” has five consonants in a row, as does “postscript, and matchstick. What are the shortest common words with five consecutive consonants? Give me Two fitting that description. 4. The more you take, the more you leave behind. What are they? 5. Complete the words below using each letter of the alphabet once only... li_ _t _o_an pu_ _ le _-r_ _ e_ _l _ _eer _cie_ _e g_ _ let _u_ge _ac_et pu_zl_ _rai_ Anwers on Page 15 PAGE 13 NRI’s Guide to Renting Out Property in India P roperty is a favourite Indian asset class and one of the main reasons for this is its ability to generate regular cash flows through rent. In this column, we will look at the various aspects involved when an Non-Resident Indian (NRI) rents out a property in India. The definition of NRI for the purposes of repatriation will be that of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) and for the purposes of income tax will be that prescribed in the Income Tax Act. Can NRIs earn rental income? An NRI can rent out property that he owns in India. The rent proceeds can be credited to the NonResident External account (NRE) or Non-Resident Ordinary (NRO) rupee account. Rent proceeds received in these accounts can be freely repatriated. If you do not have an NRE or NRO account, the proceeds can also be directly remitted abroad but you would need an appropriate certificate from a chartered accountant certifying that all taxes have been duly paid. Is rental income taxed in India? Yes. Since this income is earned in India, tax will be payable by the NRI in India. In fact, tax will be deducted at source by the payer of the rent. The payer of the rent, in this case, must obtain a TAN number and deduct TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) of 30 per cent from the rent amount. He must also provide a TDS certificate to the NRI. TAN (Tax Deduction and Collection Account Number) is a 10 digit alpha numeric number required to be obtained by all persons who are responsible for deducting or collecting tax. All those persons who are required to deduct tax at source or collect tax at source on behalf of Income Tax Department are required to apply for and obtain TAN. “The onus of deducting tax is on the payer. So, in case the payer does not deduct tax and the NRI too fails to declare the income and pay the tax, the income tax authorities can hold the payer responsible,” explains Sandeep Shanbhag, Director, Wonderland Investments. Having said that, if the tenant does not deduct tax at source, it is prudent to file your tax returns and pay the taxes thereof. Is rental income taxed in the country of residence? When you are an NRI, you are obviously a resident of another country for tax purposes. And in most cases, countries levy tax on residents on their global income. So it may happen that as per provisions of the Indian Income Tax laws, tax will be deducted at source on income earned in India, as is in the case of rent. But, at the same time, that income will be subject to tax in your country of residence. In such cases, we need to refer to the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) that India has entered into with various countries. The India-US DTAA ,for instance, provides that rent from immovable property will be taxed in the country in which the property is situated. So NRIs who are residents of US would have to pay tax on rental income in India. While they would still have to declare that income while filing their tax returns in the US, they would get a credit for taxes paid in India. It is prudent to check the tax laws of the country that you are resident of or consult an expert in that country. What is deemed rental income? According to the Indian Income Tax Act, if a person (resident or NRI) owns more than one house property, only one of them will be deemed as self-occupied. There will be no income tax on a self-occupied property. The other one, whether you rent it out or not, will be deemed to be given on rent. If you have not given the second property on rent, you will have to calculate deemed rental income on the second property (based on certain valuations prescribed by the income tax rules) and pay the tax thereof. Now, the Income Tax Act does not specify if either or both these properties must be situated only in India. Vikas Vasal, Executive Director of KPMG India explains, “At the time of drafting the Income Tax Act, one did not envisage a situation where an Indian would own properties overseas. But now, more and more Indians are settling abroad. So from the reading of the Act, the rule of ‘more than one property’ will apply to global properties.” What this means is that if you are an NRI and own only one property globally and that property is in India, you would not have to pay any income tax on the ‘deemed rental income’ in India. However, let us say you are an NRI resident in USA. You own and live in a house in USA. You also own a house property in India. Even if you do not give the property in India on rent, you would have to pay income tax on deemed rent in India. The deemed rent is determined by certain valuation rules prescribed in the Income Tax Act. Remember that even if you have inherited a property in India and that is not your only property, you would have to pay tax on deemed income. Is deemed income from house property taxed in foreign country? You would need to look at the tax code in your country of residence. In the case of NRIs in the United States, the US tax code does not tax deemed income. However, Ganga Mukkavilli, a New York City based CPA whose firm, CPAs, Taxes & Associates PC, specialises in international accounting, taxes and small businesses, says that you would still have to show the property if it is an investment property in your tax return in the US (even though you do not have any rental income). “If you do not show this investment property, the problem will arise at the time of sale of property. Suppose you sell a property on which you had no rental income for US tax purposes but had deemed income as per India Tax code, then the amount spent on the maintenance, repairs and renovations and depreciation on this property, which may be eligible for deduction or addition to your cost basis while calculating capital gains, would become difficult to establish. However, if you have not declared the property in your tax returns, the US tax code may challenge the cost basis (purchase + improvements + suspended losses) to claim a tax deduction at the time of sale,” he explains. “Of course, any investment properties with rental income and related expenses must be reported on Form Schedule E in the US tax returns and rental activities by nature are always treated as ‘passive’ investments with restrictions on deductibility of the net rental losses. Always consult a tax expert as passive activity rules are quite cumbersome,” he adds. Is Income tax exemption possible? If your total income in India, including rental income is below the basic exemption limit of Rs 1.6 lakh, you can get a TDS exemption. But the process can be complicated. You would need to apply to the tax authorities for a tax exemption certificate and submit the certificate to the tenant. The issue of the certificate is at the discretion of the tax officer and he needs to be convinced about your case. Alternately, an easier way would be to file your returns and claim refund of the TDS paid. In such cases however, the rental income may be taxed fully in the country of your residence (based on the tax laws in that country.) So if you are a resident of the US, even though your income is below the basic exemption limit in India and you pay no taxes in India, this income will be added to your income in the US and taxed according to US laws. (TNN) NRIs Can Now Open Joint Accounts With Resident Indians MUMBAI: Liberalizing the foreign exchange rules, the Reserve Bank has allowed non-resident Indians (NRIs) to hold joint accounts with Indian residents, a move that would help increase remittances. The central bank has also permitted sale proceeds of foreign investments in India to accrue to NRE/FCNR accounts after tax deductions, under the Foreign Exchange Management Act. Foreign Currency Non-Resident (FCNR) account and Non-Resident External (NRE) account are opened by Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) with the Indian banks. As per the recommendations of the committee constituted to review facilities available under FEMA, the central bank has taken such steps. RBI has allowed residents of India to include non-resident close relative in their resident bank accounts on ‘former or survivor’ basis. However, such non-resident relative shall not be eligible to operate the account during resident’s lifetime, it said in a notification. It also permitted NRIs to open NRE/FCNR account with their resident close relative. In this case, the resident relative can operate the account as a power of attorney holder. Similarly, the central bank has doubled the slab under which securities worth $50,000 per fiscal can be transferred by resident Indians to nonresident individuals ‘by way of gift’ from the present level of $25,000. RBI has also allowed resident individuals to include resident close relative in their EEFC (Exchange Earners Foreign Currency) or RFC (Resident Foreign Currency) as a joint account holder. India to Topple Japan as World’s 3rd-Largest Economy NEW DELHI: India might become the world’s third largest economy in 2011 by overtaking Japan in terms of gross domestic product (GDP) measured according to the domestic purchasing power of the rupee, otherwise called purchasing power parity. India today is the fourth-largest economy behind the US, China and Japan. Numbers from 2010 show that the Japanese economy was worth $4.31 trillion, with India snapping at its heels at $4.06 trillion. But after March’s devastating tsunami and earthquakes, Japan’s economy is widely expected to contract while India’s economy will grow between 7% and 8% this fiscal. “India should overtake Japan in 2011 to become the third-largest economy in the world at purchasing power parity,” said Sunil Sinha, head of research and senior economist at Crisil. IMF forecasts show India and Japan neck-to-neck in 2011, but the disaster in Japan has brought the event forward. “Were it not for the earthquake and tsunami, India would have overtaken Japan in around 2013-14,” said Sinha. The purchasing power parity (PPP) method measures the size of an economy by leveling price differences between countries that occur in the process of conversion to a single currency. Under this method, a dollar should be able to buy the same amount of goods anywhere in the world and exchange rates should adjust accordingly. The Economist’s Big Mac Index, which takes the price of a Big Mac burger across 120 countries to calculate the ‘real’ price of its currency, is a crude way to measure PPP. India was included in the index recently. It showed that the Indian rupee was undervalued by 53% against the US dollar in August. Earlier, a report by consultant PwC suggested that the Indian economy would surpass the Japanese economy in 2012. The IMF expects the Japanese economy to contract 0.7% this year while India is expected to grow 8.2%. A bigger economy could also give the government additional clout and bargaining power overseas. “A bigger economy would also mean more clout in international forums,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at ratings firm Care. India, once a recipient nation for foreign aid, could now come together with Brazil, Russia and China to form a fund to stabilize tottering economies in the Eurozone. Globally, companies have their eyes set on India as a rapidly growing nation that is full of opportunities. The sheer scale of development needed could drive growth for many years. “India has the advantage of size. The scope of growth and excess capacity present in terms of resources would drive growth in the future,” said Sabnavis. Economists say that while the change in the rank of a country does not mean much, it points to broad trends in the growth trajectories of nations. “It’s a long process of development, but this shows that the markets are expanding and there is robust demand within the economy,” said Siddhartha Sanyal, chief economist, Barclays Capital. According to the University of Pennsylvania PPP world tables, India has already moved ahead of Japan in 2010. The size of the Indian economy is expected to reach almost $5 trillion by the end of 2011. (TNN) It is very difficult for the prosperous to be humble. –Jane Austen PAGE 14 INDIA INTERNATIONAL OCTOBER, 2011 ~~ I M M I G R A T I O N ~~ Visa for Adopted Child Q&A Question: My husband and I are Green Card holders. If we go to another country and adopt a child, will the child need a visa? If yes, what kind of visa he/she will get? Are the rules different for different countries? We may go to India or Bangladesh for this purpose. Attorney Margaret Wong Answers Your Questions Answer: The problem with being lawful permanent residents is that you do not have the ability to adopt a foreign child and bring that child into the United States immediately, as a US citizen is able to do. The definition of child for immigration purposes, when the child is adopted, is that the child must live in physical and legal custody of the parents for two years. If you leave the US to adopt a child and do not remain outside the US with the child for two years, then the child will not be able to meet the definition of “child” for immigration purposes. Most Consular posts will not issue visitor visas for such adopted children because Congress did not provide for such a visa in the regulations, and the Department of State takes the position that the adopted child does not in fact meet the definition of a child. Further, a visitor visa is for those who do not hold an immigrant intent. If the Consulate were to let the Margaret Wong & Assoc. co. LPA, recognized as one of the country’s leading Immigration law firms, has been practicing for the last 29 years and has successfully represented thousands of clients. child enter the US on a visitor visa, it would be against then required nonimmigrant intent. Additionally, unless you as a lawful permanent resident receive a re-entry permit, you are not able to retain your permanent residence if you remain outside the United States for more than one year. Even repeated long absences from the United States can be questioned for maintaining permanent residence. H-4 & Separation Question: Is my H-4 valid after separation (legal or not legal separation)? Can I stay in US as long as his H-1 is valid ? Answer: If you are separated or legally separated, your H-4 still remains valid. It is only at the point of divorce, when the divorce is finalized (granted by the judge), when you could no longer remain in an H-4 classification as the dependent of an H-1B. Tending to All Your Immigration Needs Margaret W. Wong Managing Partner AV-Rated by Martindale-Hubbell Listed in “Best Lawyers in America” 1998 Ellis Island Medal of Honor Recipient Email: [email protected] Family Immigration Non-Immigrant Visa Employment Immigration Asylum&Refugee Deportation and Criminal Immigration Center ANSWERS TO RIDDLES 1. Since these three cats are averaging one mouse per minute, given 100 minutes, the cats could catch 100 mice. 2. 19 years. 3. Here’s a partial list of words fitting the description: Lengths; strengths; Crystal; rhythm; arrythmia; lengthy; lengthwise; nightshade; nightshirt; eighths; birthstone; lightstorm 4. Footsteps 5. light; woman; purple; x-ray; evil; queer; science; goblet; fudge; jacket; puzzle; rrail 3150 Chester Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44114 Phone: 216-566-9908 Fax: 216-566-1125 By Appointment Only : Columbus, OH office: Phone 614-221-8892 Detroit, MI Office: Phone: 313-527-9989 www.imwong.com Answers to Gandhi Quiz Expires 10-30-11 OCTOBER, 2011 Expires 10-30-11 Mahatma Gandhi Quiz Questions with Answers 1) When was Mohandas Gandhi born? Ans: b) 2 October 1869 2) Where was Mohandas Gandhi born? Ans: c) Porbandar 3. Which plays left a deep impression on Gandhiji? Ans: (c) Both (a) and (b) 4. Who desired to convert Gandhiji to Christianity in South Africa? Ans: (a) A. W. Baker 5. In the course of resistance against which of the following in South Africa did Gandhiji first use his new political weapon which came to be known later on as ‘Satyagraha’? Ans: (c) Asiatic Law Amendment Act 6) Which book did Mohandas Gandhi write? Ans: b) The Story of My Experiments with Truth 7) Where was Mohandas Gandhi for most of the time in 1893-1914? Ans: c) South Africa 8) In which year was the Salt March? Ans: c) 1930 9) Where is Sabarmati Ashram? Ans: a) Ahmedabad 10) When did Mohandas Gandhi die? Ans: c) 30 January 1948 INDIA INTERNATIONAL ASIAN TOURS & TRAVEL New York / Chicago –Mumbai/Delhi From any city in US Lowest fares Confirmed seats Reserve Seats Today! Free Ticket delivery anywhere in US Call Ranjit Dhillon: 330-467-6711 Cell: 216-401-1322 For your convenience, we can answer your calls in English, Hindi & Punjabi PAGE 15 COMING SOON, TASTE OF INDIAN URBAN FOOD NOW IN RESTAURANT SETTING Every Tuesday Every Wednesday Every Thursday Bombay Street food Southern Delicasy Dosa-Sambhar, Idli-Sambhar, Mehadu Vada, Dahi Vada, Uttapam etc.. Pani-Puri, Puri Chat, Bhel, Samosa Chat, Papadi Chat etc... Vada pav, Bhaji Pav, Dabeli, Chole Bhature etc... Use our Spacious Banquet Hall We will Help you Organize Your Parties (Upto 200 people) *Great Location *Huge Parking Space *Reasonable Rates *Delicious Food *Excellent Service (Come . . . Do Your Party – Have Fun and Go Home– We will Take Care of the After-Party Clean-up) We are Open Everyday * Everyday Lunch Buffet * We Do Catering too! 5106 Great Northern Plaza South, North Olmsted, OH 44070 (Two-minute drive from Highway-480 Great Northern Blvd Exit) Phone 440-734-0500 Fax 440-734-0505 Join us on facebook @ Cleveland Bamboo Garden for updates, specials and events