Indian. Girl Here
She is the one who negotiates between two warring dictionaries—one in Hindi, one in English—and builds a third language no one taught her. She can argue Marx with her political science professor and still know exactly how much ghee to add to the dal. She can write code in the library and then come home to light a diya for Ganesh, because both acts require precision, both require faith.
When she walks into a boardroom—or a classroom, or a temple, or a protest—she brings with her the quiet thunder of every woman who came before. Her grandmother, married at thirteen, who whispered stories of freedom while grinding spices. Her mother, who learned to drive a scooter just to prove she could. And the girls her age who will never be written into history books—the ones who fight for water, for school, for the right to say no. indian. girl
Indian. A passport. A history of spices and silk, of colonizers and nuclear treaties. The smell of turmeric that won’t wash out from under her fingernails. The weight of a mother’s gold bangles clicking like a warning: Remember who you are. She is the one who negotiates between two
But here is what the world forgets: the period in between. When she walks into a boardroom—or a classroom,
Indian girl. Not a hyphen. A whole sentence.
Girl. A body to be watched. A voice to be softened. A future negotiated between wedding invitations and exit exam scores. She is told: Don’t stay out too late. Don’t laugh too loud. Don’t want too much.
