The Nevada State Assembly opened its session with a Hindu prayer for the first time on March 19. It was led by Rajan Zed, a Hindu chaplain and director of public affairs of the Hindu Temple of Northern Nevada. RN&R spoke with him before the session. Heโ€™ll also give the blessing at the Nevada State Senate session on May 7 in Carson City, another first. In April, heโ€™ll teach Hinduism classes at Truckee Meadows Community College. Of his fellow Indians living in the area, he says, โ€œYou donโ€™t see us, but we are here.โ€

Is there a physical Hindu temple here?

No, we donโ€™t have a temple here. We have whatโ€™s called the Hindu Temple of Northern Nevada, and we are raising funds to build a temple. The closest temples are in Yuba City, Sacramento and Livermore.

How long have you been in Reno?

Since 1997.

Did you come here from India?

I came from California. I like it here. We have over 500 families here in Northern Nevada. We speak different languages. In India, we have 18 different languages in our Constitution. They are not dialectsโ€”they have different scripts. โ€ฆ Most are here. So in order to communicate, we speak to each other in English. The Indians here, most are from Gujarat, Punjab, Andhra /Pradesh.

What about you?

Himachal Pradesh. โ€ฆ So, we have the India Association of Northern Nevada. It takes care of the affairs of East Indians. Then the Hindu Temple; it raises money for the temple. Iโ€™m on the board of directors for both groups. The Hindu Temple, we have prayers about once a month [at various peopleโ€™s homes]. โ€ฆ They post notices at the Indian grocery stores, so even the non-Indians, sometimes they show up.

And theyโ€™re welcome?

Yes. Hindus, we donโ€™t proselytize. โ€ฆ The only condition you have is you take off your shoes before you go into the temple or house.

Youโ€™re giving a blessing or prayer at the state assembly. How did that come about?

I work as a chaplain in area hospitals in Northern Nevada. So I attend the meetings also of all the other chaplains. The other chaplains are basically pastors. So we are very friendly with each other. I am also active with the interfaith association here. Over Thanksgiving, we had it in the Methodist Church with all the representatives of different religions. Itโ€™s very interesting to go thereโ€”Catholics, Mormons, Jews. It is very good. The pastor coordinator for the legislature, he also comes, too. So we talked. I said, โ€œSo you have prayers from different denominations sometimesโ€”Presbyterians, others. So, can I try?โ€ He said, โ€œOf course.โ€ And he scheduled me. โ€ฆ This is the first time theyโ€™re having Hindu prayer in the history of Nevada legislature. โ€ฆ Theyโ€™re sending a man from Washington D.C., with โ€œVoice of Americaโ€ to cover it. And national newspapers in India have covered it.

What does this mean to you?

Itโ€™s good. It means weโ€™ve come a long way. I congratulate ourselves and Nevada also for offering us this chance. Itโ€™s good. This is very accepting, you know, we feel welcome that way.

Do you think Reno is relatively accepting to Hindus?

I think thereโ€™s a mystery about eastern religions, and people want to unlock the mystery. โ€ฆ I donโ€™t see much discrimination. But discrimination is the nature of human beings. We will discriminate when we get the opportunity. Everywhere in the world there is discrimination. โ€ฆ But, overall, I donโ€™t feel much discrimination because people want to learn about us.

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