Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
International

When Preet Bharara Recalled His Indian Connection

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 May, 2017 01:14 PM
    He recalled how his father came to the US with nothing but 40 years later his son became the chief federal law enforcement officer in the financial capital of world.
     
    India-born former top federal prosecutor in Manhattan Preet Bharara said he is very proud of his Indian heritage which made him more compassionate and tolerant towards other people.
     
    Mr Bharara, who was fired by President Donald Trump as US Attorney for the Southern District of New York after he refused to quit, is now a distinguished scholar in residence at New York University's School of Law where he continues working on issues like criminal and social justice, honest government, national security, and corporate accountability.
     
    "I am an American, I happen to be an Indian-American. I am very proud of my background, my roots and my heritage. I am a huge Springsteen fan... but I also listen to Bhangra music, which is a kind of Punjabi music," Mr Bharara said during a conversation last week with New York University's School of Law Dean Trevor Morrison here. 
     
     
    Asked about his heritage and background has shaped his personal and professional life, Mr Bharara said he comes from a multi-cultural background and his children know about their "Indian heritage and also about being American".
     
    Mr Bharara said people would ask him whether his being of Indian heritage and member of a minority group made him more compassionate and tolerant towards other people.
     
    "I say I suppose it does. But what has mattered more to how I think about things is not the fact that I am an Indian-American but that I am an immigrant," he said adding that he and his family are grateful to what America has given them.
     
    He recalled how his father came to the US with nothing but 40 years later his son became the chief federal law enforcement officer in the financial capital of world.
     
    "The first Indian-American US attorney appointed by the first African-American President. That is not a small thing in the minds of some people...So I began to appreciate that," he said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Paris Climate Meet Reaches Draft Deal, India's Concerns Visible

    The thrust is on a legally-binding deal before the end of this round of negotiations due till December 11.

    Paris Climate Meet Reaches Draft Deal, India's Concerns Visible

    Texas Festival To Showcase South Asian Diaspora Films

    More than a dozen films focusing on issues affecting South Asians and exploring the lives and stories of the South Asian diaspora in the US will be showcased at a film festival in Texas next February.

    Texas Festival To Showcase South Asian Diaspora Films

    Two Followers Of Group Carried Out California Attacks: Islamic State

    The radio of the Islamic State militant group on Saturday claimed that two of its followers carried out Wednesday's San Bernardino mass shooting in California.

    Two Followers Of Group Carried Out California Attacks: Islamic State

    63-Year-Old Indo-Canadian Man From Vancouver Killed In Home Invasion In Nicaragua

    63-Year-Old Indo-Canadian Man From Vancouver Killed In Home Invasion In Nicaragua
    63-year-old Vancouver man was killed this week in an apparent home invasion robbery at his property in Nicaragua

    63-Year-Old Indo-Canadian Man From Vancouver Killed In Home Invasion In Nicaragua

    No Revealing Clothes At Angkor Wat, Please

    No Revealing Clothes At Angkor Wat, Please
    Cambodia on Friday decreed that visitors should not wear revealing clothes or smoke at the famed Angkor Wat temple, which was originally built as a Hindu shrine dedicated to Lord Vishnu.

    No Revealing Clothes At Angkor Wat, Please

    US Supreme Court To Take Up College Reservation Adversely Impacting Indian Diaspora

    US Supreme Court To Take Up College Reservation Adversely Impacting Indian Diaspora
    The US Supreme Court is set to take up next week a case challenging the legality of reservations based on race in colleges and university admissions that adversely impact the Indian diaspora.

    US Supreme Court To Take Up College Reservation Adversely Impacting Indian Diaspora