The Coconut Generation
My favorite cousin, Vineet Kantayya, just sent me
a blurb for a new book about "our" demographic, by Sam
George:Understanding the Coconut Generation: Ministry
to the Americanized Asian
Indians is a multidisciplinary
study of the Indian American experience, including a brief historical review,
demographical data, psycho-social analysis, anthropological and theological
reflections, results of a web-based survey and many practical lessons for
Christian ministry.Sam also has a
Coconut
Generation blog, and there's now a South Asian
Connection featuring evangelist TV Thomas. [Read more] about how I first started
grappling with my "coconut" identity.
Back in the early 1990s, while working with the
now-dormant North American Council of South Asian Christians (NACSAC) -- founded by TV Thomas -- a bunch of us
"young adults" founded a short-lived offshoot called the South Asian Youth
Network (SAYN). One of the few things we did was discuss the tensions of being
what are often called "third-culture kids." This was compounded by the
additional fragmentation of being a Christian minority in a religious "home"
culture, while part a nominal Christian majority in a much more secular "host"
country.That was when I first heard
the term "Coconut" to describe someone who felt/acted "white" on the inside,
while being "brown" on the outside (by analogy with Oreo for blacks and Banana for Chinese). We used the term more
humorously than pejoratively, but it was certainly apt. In fact, working with
SAYN was virtually the only time I was really conscious of my Indian heritage (before getting married, of course!).
Posted: Mon - May 8, 2006 at 09:13 PM