Growing up can be difficult when you have very little in common with the people around you. Amara Chaudhry-Kravitz, born to a couple that had emigrated from Lahore to a small American town in Appalachian Virginia, experienced this firsthand. There were very few South Asian immigrants around her and Amara stood out for being ‘different’. “[South Asians] mostly came later in the 1980s ... I experienced and witnessed a lot of discrimination from childhood through adulthood,” she says.
Chaudhry-Kravitz, who now practices law, believes these experiences have informed her career choice. “That’s why I became a civil rights lawyer, and even within that I focused on criminal justice for so long, because I think that’s how racism is perpetrated primarily in the United States,” the Philadelphia-based attorney says.
Chaudhry-Kravitz says that while she is sometimes judged for her faith by non-Muslims, she also feels that as a woman who does not take the hijab or fit into certain ideas of what a Muslim looks like, she is also dismissed within the community for not being Muslim enough. It does not help that she is married to a Jewish American gentleman.
How Pakistani-Americans are making their interfaith and interracial marriages work
CROSSING THE DIVIDE
It is easy to trace where this reaction comes from. Many Pakistani parents still put potential suitors through the ringer: their ethnicity, religious beliefs, socioeconomic and family backgrounds, looks and ages are all up for scrutiny. However, attitudes are changing and the new generation increasingly marry a partner of their choice. What matter isn’t the partner’s ethnic or religious background but whether they share the same values.
Ammara Chaudhry-Kravitz and John Kravitz are one such couple. Ammara’s family was quick to accept her decision to marry her now-husband John Kravitz. The fact that he was from a different faith or culture was not a concern for her parents, she maintains.
Instead, it was her in-laws who resisted the union. “It was fairly enormous in his family’s world view,” she says. “John’s family is of the Eastern European Jewish fraction — a religious community that historically marries within itself. It was believed that the culture would die if people assimilated too much.”
WHEN SUZIE MET SAKIB
It is interesting to observe the emphasis people from around the world place on marriage as a means of cultural preservation. Saks (short for Sakib) Afridi and Suzie Afridi are another couple that has experienced this.