Different
Cultures Bond over Food and Hospitality
By Julie Patel
With
her husband out of town, Janet Constantinou decided on the
fly to attend a lunch at the home of a friend's friend. She
walked through the crowd of strangers laughing, talking passionately
and gesturing boldly, and found herself before a table of
plates brimming with Pakistani curries and rice, and heaps
of thin brown noodles.
“That's a dessert,'' said a younger woman nearby wearing
a delicately embroidered violet and white shalwar kameez,
or Pakistani dress.
“Oh. It looks rather like a Turkish dessert,'' Constantinou,
62, said in a thick British accent. The woman, Zeya Mohsin,
45, joked that it was surprising Constantinou hadn't seen
the dessert before given all the Indians and Pakistanis living
in England.

A wholesome fusion of diverse groups,different cultures |
The connection the women developed is precisely what Samina
Faheem Sundas was shooting for. Sundas hosted the event in
her Palo Alto home, which doubles as a day care center, Saturday
to promote the mission of American Muslim Voice, the group
she heads. The group's aim is to unite people of different
cultures in a campaign for human rights and cultural understanding.
The 70 guests looked like grown-up versions of posters tacked
up all around them, depicting children of many races holding
hands, embracing and playing.
All afternoon, people exchanged stories, laughed and sampled
the food together.
“I grew up in a small village with no one but Anglo-Saxons,''
Constantinou said. “I didn't know any Indians or eat
any Indian food until I moved to the US.''
Mohsin said she had similar experiences growing up in Pakistan,
where “there was no issue of black, white, brown'' because
everyone was the same race.
For years, Sundas volunteered for another non-profit agency,
American Muslim Alliance, which engages Muslims in civic issues
like voting, writing letters to politicians and even running
for office. But after the Sept. 11 attacks, as Americans from
South Asia and the Middle East were increasingly targeted
in hate crimes and other, more subtle, forms of discrimination,
Sundas created a non-profit that would go back to basics and
focus on educating people about Muslims and forming interfaith
alliances.
“People were calling us terrorists, so I realized they're
not too ready to vote for us,'' she said. “It was like
the second story of a building, so I had to go back and build
the foundation.''
The idea of the open house was that Sundas didn't want activists
like herself to meet and teach each other about different
cultures in conference rooms and on panels; she wanted them
to connect at a human level over warm meals at their homes.
“No one sticks their neck out for a stranger,'' she
said. “You don't really care about someone else's lot
in life unless you get to know them on a personal level.''
Two hours into the event, a stream of guests started leaving,
but some delayed when goodbyes sparked new conversations.
Several guests offered to host similar events in the future.
As Constantinou prepared to bid farewell to her new friends,
Mohsin and Sundas, she recalled feeling “elated for
thinking how women can bring people together.''
“Why can't nations do it like individuals can?'' she
thought.
She touched Sundas' arm, thanked her and asked if she would
do it again next year.
“Why next year?'' Sundas said. “I hope to do it
sooner.'' (Courtesy Mercury News – Feb 27, 2005)
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