Friday, August 28, 2020

A Cultural Encounter :: Personal Narrative Papers

A Cultural Encounter I met this diverse individual at the periodical area of the Good Library of State College. In the wake of approaching the individual for my article that I had mentioned I ask his name, he answers with his Indian inflection, Ajai Ahulalia. I state, What?s that? Ajai Sanhi, he reacts back. What? I state, being humiliated in light of the fact that I can't comprehend his name. Ajai Ahulalia he goes after for the third time. Goodness Ajai, at long last I comprehend. I ask, Were do you live? Yoder First he answers, at that point I fell a bonehead once more, Truly, me as well. What has happened to Ajai?s life when he lived in India and now here in the U.S.? Ajai lived in a similar floor as I did yet I didn't see him. I realized that there were a few Indians on my floor however I made some hard memories realizing Americans names, since I experienced childhood in Israel, so I was unable to try and articulate Indian names. For instance, the name BJ, what is BJ for? It represents Bijayendra, what about Rishi, and Kashif? At any rate now following a year I know their names and can articulate them effectively. From that point forward I have joined Ajai, Business twofold major of State College, for an Indian dinner at Chicago, which was five folks into this little vehicle of Ajai?s going to Chicago for Indian supper then a stroll on the sea shore. I have joined their discussions in any event, when I simply comprehend ratarata lara a shara and put some a greater amount of this ai;u,mnbaiuet;lkmv; into the discussion. As of now I would see Ajai as an individual that can be found for the most part in the PC lab bringing in cash, since I would sta te he is a cash machine or known as the varsitybooks.com. Possibly he can cause our book shop to fail or if nothing else power the costs down. Ajai has not been consistently the individual depicted. As per companions Ajai has changed his physical looks since the first occasion when he came to State College; an Indian with long hair, and a facial hair, yet now with short hair and no whiskers. These physical attributes were a piece of his Sikh religion. To be a Sikh it isn't important to have long hair, a whiskers and wear customary structures as indicated by him. The requirements of such contrasts are simply to recognize a Sikh from others. Ajai has dropped his ensembles of his religion for the absence of time to keep up his hair and facial hair and the need to continue clarifying why he is not quite the same as others.

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