Colonial Discourse and the Suffering of Indian American Children Book Cover.webp

In this book, we analyze the psycho-social consequences faced by Indian American children after exposure to the school textbook discourse on Hinduism and ancient India. We demonstrate that there is an intimate connection—an almost exact correspondence—between James Mill’s colonial-racist discourse (Mill was the head of the British East India Company) and the current school textbook discourse. This racist discourse, camouflaged under the cover of political correctness, produces the same psychological impacts on Indian American children that racism typically causes: shame, inferiority, embarrassment, identity confusion, assimilation, and a phenomenon akin to racelessness, where children dissociate from the traditions and culture of their ancestors.


This book is the result of four years of rigorous research and academic peer-review, reflecting our ongoing commitment at Hindupedia to challenge the representation of Hindu Dharma within academia.

Dhumāvatī

From Hindupedia, the Hindu Encyclopedia
(Redirected from Dhumavati)

By Jit Majumdar


  1. of the nature of smoke; created out of smoke
  2. one of the important deities of the Tantric pantheon, belonging to the group of the 10 Mahāvidyās, usually the 7th in order. She has the form of an old widow, dwelling in the cremation or charnel grounds, riding a crow or a chariot with a crow as its puller that has a banner with the crow as its emblem; dressed in soiled white shroud used to cover corpses, holding a winnowing basket. Her expression is stern, grave, and frowning, with crooked teeth, long nose, shriveled skin, unkempt and disheveled grey hair and gaunt features. Embodying hunger, thirst, misery, poverty and conflict she gives the impression of inauspiciousness and misfortune, but is actually the goddess who gives her worshippers supernatural powers, enlightenment, gratification of all desires and acquisition of all fortune, after she leads them through the veneer of inauspiciousness, destitution and ill-fortune that she wears, by making them conquer and accept that veneer.