The music
slams into my chest as soon as I enter
the darkened room. The girls are on
a small stage belting out the words
“Rabba, Rabba” to a psychedelic
beat, doing slow half circles in that
Punjabi way — one leg bent, a
palm outstretched. They are in jeans,
sequin tops and pointy-toed boots. Their
hair, Indian black, falls straight to
their shoulders.
I forget
to order a beer and instead stand transfixed,
taking in three twenty-somethings from
Jalandhar in a hotel, The Jakarta Marriott,
best known for a suicide bombing last
year. Most of those here, swaying to
the music or sipping tall, frothy green
drinks, are Indonesian; except for a
group of thick-waisted Indian men who
huddle in a corner of the dance floor.
The girls finish their song and an Indonesian
man in leather pants shakes his waist-length
hair and grabs a mike.
“The
most beautiful girls in the world are
Indian. Miss World, Miss Universe is
always from India,” he shouts.
A black man in a red track suit nods
in agreement. The girls file off stage,
another band takes over, and I’m
beamed back to reality, like a character
out of Star Trek.
I first
encountered Girlz, to use the band’s
name, the night before, at the Indian
embassy’s Republic Day reception.
There they were, in their painted-on
jeans and sequins, alternating between
bhangra and Western pop and creating
a stir in the Indian community, which
had come expecting tandoori chicken
and dal makhni, perhaps even a classical
dance performance, but certainly not
a robotic enactment of a Kylie Minogue
video by a band flown in from Bombay.
My primary interest was in the food.
But one thing led to another and, as
the giant room emptied of all but a
few stragglers, I found myself seated
at a large round table with, among others,
Deepa, Disha and Sonali. That’s
when I discovered that they’re
from Jalandhar…army kids…grew
up all over the place… now based
in Bombay…would never wear such
clothes in Punjab.
I found
myself holding on to every word, soaking
in their accents — public school
Punjabi — reacquainting myself
with how a single dismissive hand gesture
can say “oh him, we used to think
he was such a big star, but now he’s
just a regular guy to us.”
I haven’t
lived in India since I last worked there
as a journalist more than three years
ago. My contacts with Indians here in
Indonesia are sporadic, confined to
embassy functions on Republic Day and
Independence Day, and to the occasional
invitation to dinner by some kind older
person. So my encounter with the girls
hits me with the force of nostalgia,
not what you might feel when you run
into an old friend after years but,
rather, an odd blend of newness and
familiarity, like discovering a stranger
in a family album.
It’s this feeling that I’m
here to explore at the Marriott. I head
to the corner where the Girlz sit. They
remember me from the previous night
and soon I strike up a conversation
with Deepa, at 27 the oldest of the
three, and so, at least in my mind,
the band leader.
We employ
the special code that Indians are genetically
programmed to use with each other, allowing
a swift and unforgiving determination
of social worth that both makes subsequent
conversation possible, and establishes
its tone and tenor. In less than the
time it takes to finish a beer, I learn
about a brother who is a doctor in Arkansas,
a sister-in-law who works on Wall Street,
a great-grandfather who went to Princeton,
a grandfather who fought a famous case
at the Supreme Court, a father in the
army and a Welsh woman somewhere in
the family tree.
Deepa, of course, finds out about a
diplomat father, a brother at Oxford,
a master’s degree from Princeton
and an ethnic mix that’s half
Maharashtrian and half Tamil. (Though
my involuntary responses to dal makhni
and that Rabba Rabba song prove that
I’m secretly Punjabi too.)
After
a while, Deepa whips out a Nokia camera
phone and proceeds to show me pictures.
There she is in Bombay with Mick Jagger
— “he was really cool to
hang out with, a really decent person”
— playfully cradling a video camera.
Here she is with the lead singer of
the Pakistani band Junoon, I forget
his name. Here’s Deepa at the
Eiffel Tower. She tells me about performing
in Dubai, Muscat and Sri Lanka, about
how someone called them India’s
Spice Girls — there used to be
five of them — and how she hated
it because “it’s so wannabe.”
My eyes stray to the knot of Indian
men, off the dance floor, but still
in a huddle, and my mind wanders to
how being an Indian in Indonesia is
so much more predictable than being
one in America. You don’t feel
this country constantly pressing down
on you on all sides so you don’t
have to make the same effort to maintain
your sense of self.
In America,
you have Indians trying desperately
to be American, saying ant when they
mean aunt and ruthlessly excising “lift”
(for elevator), “trousers”
and “air hostess” from their
vocabularies. Then you have Indians
fighting viciously to remain Indian,
refusing to say ant when they mean aunt,
and devoting their lives to studying
19th century Bengali lesbians or the
novels of Shobha De. Then there are
the ABCDs, some of whom want to say
aunt and wear saris to work —
or, better still, complain about how
they can’t — and boast about
how their fathers read the Times of
India. In short, it’s all so complicated.
Indonesia leaves most Indians unscathed.
Nobody wants to be Indonesian. Even
the Sindhis, some of whom have been
here for generations, do not confuse
business with belonging.
You can
easily spend 20 years here playing bridge
or golf once a week with fellow Indians,
having the same friends over for stuffed
bhindi and mutton curry, and generally
getting on with a life transplanted
from Delhi’s Defence Colony or
Greater Kailash; except that the servants
are better trained and don’t scratch
their crotches in front of guests.
I turn
back to Deepa with her coke-colored
drink, her Marlboro Lights and her camera
phone with the picture of Mick Jagger.
Despite her familiarity, I sense a gulf,
a slippage between her India and mine.
Deepa is old enough to belong to an
India I recognize, young enough to have
one leg in an India that I don’t.
It saddens me to think that things are
changing so fast that before long I’ll
feel like a stranger in my own land.
Or perhaps that has already happened,
leaving me only with a craving for mutton
curry and that Rabba Rabba song in my
head.