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Sarita Sarvate

Writer, Artist, Filmmaker

Sarita Sarvate
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Politics in Education

Posted on June 29, 2006 by Sarita Sarvate
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Textbooks are becoming vehicles for political propaganda It was when I was helping my older son with his middle-school homework that I first came across a tome titled A Message of Ancient Days. So I read about Mesopotamia and the … Continue reading →

Posted in Children & Education | Leave a reply

Woman: India’s New Endangered Species?

Posted on March 18, 2006 by Sarita Sarvate
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Published by New America Media A recent study published in the British medical journal Lancet claims that about half-a-million girl babies are aborted in India every year. In this study Canadian and Indian researchers, who collaborated on a national survey … Continue reading →

Posted in Women | Leave a reply

Intelligent Design Defies Intelligence

Posted on February 15, 2006 by Sarita Sarvate
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Many immigrants like me find it hard to believe that America, home to some of the world’s greatest scientists like Albert Einstein and Linus Pauling, has once again been questioning the science of evolution. Like most Indian children of the … Continue reading →

Posted in Society | Leave a reply

Festival Season

Posted on November 17, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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My childhood memories of Nagpur are marked only by festivals. The onset of monsoon rains heralded Bhulabai, or little Goddess. It was the first festival to dawn on my consciousness, perhaps because it was the one reserved exclusively for girls. … Continue reading →

Posted in Memoirs | Leave a reply

America: Welcome to the Third World

Posted on September 2, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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Editor’s Note: Limited resources, disorganized governmental response and apathy toward Mother Nature’s victims sound familiar to an Indian American. The U.S. must recognize Third World conditions within its borders. SAN JOSE, Calif.–When I first came here from India nearly 30 … Continue reading →

Posted in Politics | Leave a reply

Why Do I Read Fiction?

Posted on August 22, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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I wish I could recall the exact moment when I first became aware of an author named Alice Munro. Perhaps it was years ago in the New Yorker that I read one of her stories. I wish I could remember … Continue reading →

Posted in Society | Leave a reply

The Passing of Time

Posted on July 10, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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I was driving by the local middle school the other day, when I noticed a group of students huddling around the platform of the school flagpole, lighting candles, pasting handmade cards, arranging flowers in vases. I pulled up, wondering if … Continue reading →

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Accepting Our Mothers

Posted on June 14, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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On Mother’s Day this year, I did something unusual: I called my mother to wish her “Happy Mother’s Day.” She was surprised because, until my phone call, she didn’t know about Mother’s Day, and I hadn’t told her because I … Continue reading →

Posted in Women | Leave a reply

Kashmir On My Mind

Posted on April 28, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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Editor’s Note: An Indian American remembers how the mystical mountain valleys of Kashmir were, through Bollywood films, forever embedded in her imagination. Recent moves toward peace in the disputed region give the writer hope that Hindus and Muslims can embrace … Continue reading →

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The Politics of Deep Throat

Posted on April 27, 2005 by Sarita Sarvate
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Apparently there is a new documentary out about Deep Throat. Not Bob Woodward’s secret source dubbed “Deep Throat” in the Watergate investigation, but about that other, equally infamous Deep Throat, the movie, which made Linda Lovelace a household name. The … Continue reading →

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