America’s First Ever Hindu Congresswoman Will Take the Oath of Office Over the Bhagavad Gita

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November 10, 2012

Hawaii's Tulsi Gabbard, daughter of a Catholic father and a Hindu mother, became the first Hindu-American to become a member of the US House of Representatives. Five Indian-Americans lost their bid to enter the US Congress.

November 10, 2012

Hawaii's Tulsi Gabbard, daughter of a Catholic father and a Hindu mother, became the first Hindu-American to become a member of the US House of Representatives. Five Indian-Americans lost their bid to enter the US Congress.

Newly elected US House of Representatives' member Tulsi Gabbard, speaks on stage with other female members of Congress during day one of the Democratic National Convention at Time Warner Cable Arena on September 4, 2012

While all five Indian-American candidates lost their big to enter the US Congress, Tulsi Gabbard created history by becoming the first Hindu-American to enter the US House of Representatives.

An Iraq war veteran, 31-year-old Gabbard defeated K. Crowley of the Republican Party with a handsome margin in Hawaii's second Congressional district. Her victory has been cheered by the Hindu-American community across the country.

The heavily Democratic district also elected one of two Buddhists to have ever served in the Congress, Mazie Hirono, who won her seat in 2006 but is now running for the US Senate.

Born in American Samoa to a Catholic father and a Hindu mother, Gabbard moved to Hawaii when she was two. In 2002, at age 21, she was elected to the Hawaii state legislature.

The next year, she joined the Hawaii National Guard, and in 2004 was deployed to Baghdad as a medical operations specialist. After completing officers' training, she was deployed to Kuwait in 2008 to train the country's counter-terrorism units.

"Although there are not very many Hindus in Hawaii, I never felt discriminated against. I never really gave it a second thought growing up that any other reality existed, or that it was not the same everywhere," Gabbard said in a statement soon after she took an unbeatable lead over her Republican challenger.

"On my last trip to the mainland, I met a man who told me that his teenage daughter felt embarrassed about her faith, but after meeting me, she's no longer feeling that way," Gabbard said.

"He was so happy that my being elected to Congress would give hope to hundreds and thousands of young Hindus in America, that they can be open about their faith, and even run for office, without fear of being discriminated against or attacked because of their religion," Gabbard said.

At 21, Gabbard became the youngest person elected to the Hawaii legislature. At 23, she was the state's first elected official to voluntarily resign to go to war. At 28, she was the first woman to be presented with an award by the Kuwait Army National Guard.


Courtesy: Daily News