Chivukula unveils Diwali measure for schools

Chivukula1
Assembly Deputy Speaker Upendra J. Chivukula

TRENTON: In the season of Diwali, the Indian festival of lights, celebrated by an estimated one billion people worldwide, Assembly Deputy Speaker Upendra J. Chivukula unveiled a measure he will sponsor to urge New Jersey school districts with high Indian-American populations to declare the first day of the five-day festival as a holiday.

Derived from the Sanskrit word ‘Deepavali,’ which means a row of lights, Diwali is the most popular Indian festival celebrated by a majority of the state’s Indian-American population including Hindus, Buddhists, and Sikhs. At about 3.2 percent, Indian-Americans are the largest component of New Jersey’s fastest-growing Asian-American group, which accounts for an estimated 8.7 percent of the state’s nearly nine million population.

During Diwali, the faithful light their homes and businesses with diyas which are decorated clay lamps fueled by oil. These lamps are kept lit throughout the night to invoke the blessings of Laxmi, the Hindu Goddess of material and spiritual wealth and well being. This year, Diwali was celebrated through November 17.

“The lamps of Diwali illuminate a path to understanding and awareness of a rich heritage and also signify the desire for spiritual enlightenment. Closing schools with high Indian-American populations on the first day of Diwali would honor an important tradition of a growing segment of our state’s population and would provide all Indian-American children with the opportunity to celebrate this wonderful festival with their family and friends,” Chivukula said.

The only South Asian lawmaker in the 120-member Legislature, Chivukula encouraged non Indian-Americans to learn about Diwali either from their Indian friends or by taking a walk down streets like Oak Tree Road in Edison or Newark Avenue in Jersey City.

“It is the mingling of cultures and traditions that helps us open our hearts and minds to each other and deepens our human experience. It fosters our coexistence in harmony,” he added.

“Perhaps the unity in our diversity is best illustrated in the Sanskrit verse that reverberates through many Indian homes during the festival of Diwali and could apply to people of all faiths.”

Asato Ma Sad Gamaya
Tamasoma Jyotir Gamaya
Mrityor ma Amritam Gamaya

Translation

Lead me from the untruth to the truth
Lead me from darkness to light
Lead me from death to immortality

Under current state law, Diwali is included in the list of religious holidays during which students are permitted to be absent from school. The statute ensures that a student’s absence on a religious holiday will be recorded as an excused absence and that the student cannot be deprived of any opportunity for any award or of the right to take an alternative test or examination.

Chivukula’s measure would urge a school district with a large population of Indian-American students to close schools on the first day of Diwali.

India Post News Service

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