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STUDENTS
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Their First Fourth
Students from around the world find the American Fourth of July fascinating
The Shorthorn staff
The Shorthorn: Mykah Wright
Mechanical engineering graduate students Veneet Shah and Sameer Gokhale
are experiencing their first 4th of July celebration while in America.
They both came from India and did not know each other before becoming
neighbors at the university.
Fireworks spark curiosity as international students explore American Independence
Day celebrations. The event punctuates cultural differences and delights.
“I’ve seen parades and fireworks shows on television, but
never in reality,” said Vineet Shah, mechanical engineering graduate
student. “I want to see how it is done here.”
He joined the campus community in the spring, coming directly from Vadodara,
a community in Gujarat, India. He said very small fireworks frequently
accompany weddings and key events, but nothing on the scale of what he’ll
probably see this week.
India has been independent since 1947 and has an annual celebration Aug.
15. Shah said schools and colleges close so students and their families
can participate in events held within those facilities. The entire community
isn’t involved, so the focus is primarily upon students within their
schools and colleges.
“There is a flag hoisting with speeches and lots of songs,”
he said. “Students wear all white clothes, even their shoes, on
that day.”
There are no parades or patriotic colors as seen in the American equivalent.
Small flags are frequently sold along the road a few days before. He said
people stick the flags on their cars or wear flag pins on their clothes.
His neighbor, Sameer Gokhale, is also from India. They met on the Internet
before arriving in America, where they discovered they shared the same
major and destination. Neither has witnessed an American Independence
Day, and both said they look forward to it.
Gokhale, unlike Shah, had seen notable fireworks shows because he lived
in Mumbai. He said religious cultures and celebration dates differed across
the nation but that the entire country celebrates New Year’s Eve
on Dec. 31. The festivities always include large fireworks displays.
“But we didn’t have parades,” he said. “I am curious
to see what that is all about.”
Parades didn’t catch the interest of electrical engineering senior
Bhumika Makwana, who works in the Ransom Hall computer center. This isn’t
her first American Independence Day celebration.
“It isn’t a special day, so some students just sleep,”
she said. “We don’t go to the parade, but we usually go see
the fireworks show.”
Three English Language Institute summer program students visiting America
from Taiwan for the first time weren’t attracted to the parade either.
Their homeland doesn’t have parades.
“That just isn’t something we do,” Ashley Chang said.
“We see many fireworks shows in our country, and I want to see an
American one.”-
Her homeland celebrates a national holiday every Oct. 10, though they’re
not an independent nation. Festivities include singing the national anthem,
observing military displays in front of their central government buildings
and enjoying fireworks after dark, she said.
The idea of people eating food at a national celebration was new to Chang
and her two fellow students. Parades and picnics in the park before a
fireworks show didn’t fit her image of a national holiday.
“I want to see these people who gather at the park and eat,”
Lily Wang said. “I especially want to go for the show.”
News about the upcoming celebration enthused Baron Yang, and the fireworks
show peaked his interest.
“It would make me sad to miss something like that,” he said.
“Now that I know it will be here, I want to go.”
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