Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
India

Modi to meet Tulsi Gabbard, first Hindu American in US Congress

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Sep, 2014 12:51 PM
    Among the host of high profile personalities to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his New York visit will be a US politician of especial interest - Tulsi Gabbard, the first Hindu American in the US Congress and a strong supporter of Modi.
     
    Gabbard, a 33-year-old US Democrat Congresswoman from Hawaii, is also an Iraq war veteran.
     
    Gabbard, the first practicing Hindu American in the Congress who took her oath on the Bhagwad Gita, had spoken to Modi after his victory in the general election and congratulated him and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
     
    She has been involved in the planning of Modi's US visit and had last month met two BJP leaders -- Vijay Jolly and MP Rajyavardhan Rathore -- in that connection. 
     
    Gabbard has always maintained that it was a "great blunder" by the US government to have denied a visa to Modi in the wake of the 2002 Gujarat riots.
     
    She is to attend the Sep 28 speech by Modi at Madison Square Garden, New York, where he will address thousands of Indian Americans. 
     
    The event has been organized by the Indian American Community Foundation.
     
    According to her website, "Tulsi was born in 1981 in Leloaloa, American Samoa, the fourth of five children born to Carol and State Senator Mike Gabbard."
     
    Besides being the first member of the Hindu faith to be elected to the Congress, she is also one of just two female combat veterans ever to hold a seat. 
     
    She joined the Hawaii Army National Guard after college and was deployed to Iraq in 2004 and in Kuwait in 2009. 
     
    She was vocal in criticizing the arrest of Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade and said in a statement last December that she was "disappointed" when she found out about Khobragade's initial treatment by law enforcement officials and added that while foreign diplomats must uphold US law they are also entitled to dignified treatment.
     
    Gabbard maintained that Khobragade's arrest should not come at the expense of such a vital partnership between the two nations.
     
    She has also been forceful in opposing a US House Resolution, 417, last year which condemned India's religious freedom record. 
     
    The resolution was widely condemned by the Indian and Hindu American communities as flawed and inaccurate.
     
     
    Gabbard criticized the resolution, saying the "417 weakens, rather than strengthens, the friendship between the United States and India. The resolution runs counter to all the hard work that the American people, particularly those in the Indian American community, have done to improve the relationship."
     
    "Throughout history, India as a nation has been home to many religions, and has protected many as well, including Tibetan Buddhists, Jews, Christians, and Muslims," she had said in a statement.
     
    After Modi's victory in the April-May election, she issued a statement saying she looked forward to "working with Mr. Modi and other members of the Indian government toward our mutual goals of peace, stability, and economic growth in the Asia-Pacific region. 
     
    "A partnership between the world's two largest and greatest democracies is necessary for us to successfully address the many global challenges we face, including economic growth, bilateral trade, the environment, terrorism, and security."
     
    Modi will be in the US from Sep 26-30, during which he will be in New York till Sep 29 afternoon.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Kaum de Heere: Punjab Youth Congress objects to Film on Indira's Assassins

    Kaum de Heere: Punjab Youth Congress objects to Film on Indira's Assassins
    The Punjab Youth Congress (PYC) Saturday strongly opposed the permission granted for the screening of the controversial Punjabi movie 'Kaum de Heere', saying it glorifies the assassins of former prime minister Indira Gandhi.

    Kaum de Heere: Punjab Youth Congress objects to Film on Indira's Assassins

    Punjab seeks army help for de-addiction centres

    Punjab seeks army help for de-addiction centres
    The Punjab government has sought the cooperation of the Indian Army for setting up drug de-addiction centres in three districts along the Pakistan border.

    Punjab seeks army help for de-addiction centres

    Quake hits northeast India

    Quake hits northeast India
    A low intensity earthquake measuring 4.8 on the Richter scale shook India's northeastern states and parts of Myanmar Saturday, authorities said.

    Quake hits northeast India

    AAP slams BJP for appointing Yeddyurappa as vice president

    AAP slams BJP for appointing Yeddyurappa as vice president
    The AAP Saturday said that BJP has completely compromised with corruption and criminalisation of politics by appointing former Karnataka chief minister B.S. Yeddyurappa as its vice-president.

    AAP slams BJP for appointing Yeddyurappa as vice president

    Political Circus: Will Modi's own camp accept his I-Day advice?

    Political Circus: Will Modi's own camp accept his I-Day advice?
    Perhaps the most important part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Independence Day speech from the ramparts of New Delhi's Red Fort was his call...

    Political Circus: Will Modi's own camp accept his I-Day advice?

    Man hurls shoe at Badal; Akali Dal blames AAP

    Man hurls shoe at Badal; Akali Dal blames AAP
    A shoe hurled at Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal by an unemployed youth in a village near here Friday during an Independence Day function...

    Man hurls shoe at Badal; Akali Dal blames AAP