Since the dreadful earthquake in Nepal, my colorful diverse neighbourhood in the so called "Little Bombay", the most exotic corner of Queens, NY and in particular in Jackson Heights has been flooded with news vans, people bringing candles and leaving them in the Diversity Plaza and a part of the facing wall has squeezed coloful notes of comments, thoughts, feelings and prayers among the doors, windows, and signs of local stores. There are corners of the paved road and the sidewalk filled with huge boxes and plastic bags with supplies to be sent to the victims of the Earthquke.
Although it is called "Little Bombay", the area is full of stores and people passing by not only from India, but especially from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Nepal, and other South Asian countries. So it was not an accident they all responded immediately to the tragedy. We were used to see street signs with Indian hard-to-pronounce names and even harder to remmber names. We were used to hear the high-pitched female Indian singers' voices and see posters of music and video stores with Bolywood stars. We were used to smell the mesmerizing spices, such as curry and grilled meats coming from every corner of the streets. We were used to witness protests and awareness campaigns for the salvation of Tibet and other topics in human rights activism. We used to watch peaceful and well-educated Muslims protesting against fanatic Talibans and enjoyed the variety of different religions and philosophies represented by local temples and mosques and street vendors and solicitors around us accompanied by ancient symbols of Far Eastern cultures. Sikhs were wearing turbans in different colors soliciting store flyers, hindu women in sharis corwding the sidewalks with their children and their men wearing traditional atire and having a red spot on their foreheads. Imams and musezins prayed openly, prostrated and celebrated Ramadan and other muslim holidays. South Asian Christians celebrated their religious holidays not only Christmas, but also the Easter with Christian prayers and songs in Bengali, Hindi and Urdu, Easter eggs and bunnies. Buddhist monks were also walking next to them all, and sometimes prayed, chanted, meditated and used candles and insencers to offer the passerby a mental trip to their spititual world. It was a trip to the Far East without paying a ticket for us the locals and only $2.25 MTA Metrocard fare for all the others!
After the mysterious explosion of a bomb in a local store over a year ago and after the great fire of the Plaza College building a few months ago, now we have this incident that shook the world. Now people of all cultural and racial backgrounds and especially South Asians pass by and stop, taking pictures and go and some others stay there longer. I tried to take some pics too, but photography is not my forte, so I chose some pics from the huge pool of the Internet and here they are. So let's all say our prayers for Nepal, because earthquake knows no time and location: it hits when and where you don't expect it...
Recent Pictures of "Little Bombay" in Queens, NY after the Earthquake in Nepal
Source: http://abcnews.go.com/images/International/AP_nepal_earthquake_aftermath_03_jef_150427.jpg
Source: https://img.washingtonpost.com/rf/image_1484w/2010-2019/Wires/Online/2015-04-30/AP/Images/NepalEarthquakeUS-03db5.jpg?uuid=GD3iHu-DEeSAUIOekjSzAw
Diversity Plaza over the years
http://assets.dnainfo.com/generated/photo/2013/10/diversity-plaza-1381752048.jpg/larger.jpg
https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcT8r0em7kKbx9puqJOfDFcA9hyHJgO1EiQQ7v_LHam-n9JVVQjS
http://assets.dnainfo.com/generated/photo/2014/10/jackson-heights-food-court-2--1413231804.jpg/larger.jpg
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Thursday, April 30, 2015
"Little Bombay" prays for the poor souls of the earthquake victims in Nepal. Our hearts and prayers are with them.
Labels:
Community Affairs,
Philanthropy