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. Heโll also give the blessing at the Nevada State Senate session on May 7 in Carson City, another first. In April, heโll teach Hinduism classes at Truckee Meadows Community College. Of his fellow Indians living in the area, he says, โYou donโt see us, but we are here.โ
Is there a physical Hindu temple here?
No, we donโt have a temple here. We have whatโs 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 dialectsโthey have different scripts. โฆ 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. โฆ 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. Iโm on the board of directors for both groups. The Hindu Temple, we have prayers about once a month [at various peopleโs homes]. โฆ They post notices at the Indian grocery stores, so even the non-Indians, sometimes they show up.
And theyโre welcome?
Yes. Hindus, we donโt proselytize. โฆ The only condition you have is you take off your shoes before you go into the temple or house.
Youโre 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. Itโs very interesting to go thereโCatholics, Mormons, Jews. It is very good. The pastor coordinator for the legislature, he also comes, too. So we talked. I said, โSo you have prayers from different denominations sometimesโPresbyterians, others. So, can I try?โ He said, โOf course.โ And he scheduled me. โฆ This is the first time theyโre having Hindu prayer in the history of Nevada legislature. โฆ Theyโre sending a man from Washington D.C., with โVoice of Americaโ to cover it. And national newspapers in India have covered it.
What does this mean to you?
Itโs good. It means weโve come a long way. I congratulate ourselves and Nevada also for offering us this chance. Itโs good. This is very accepting, you know, we feel welcome that way.
Do you think Reno is relatively accepting to Hindus?
I think thereโs a mystery about eastern religions, and people want to unlock the mystery. โฆ I donโt 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. โฆ But, overall, I donโt feel much discrimination because people want to learn about us.
