Comedian Rajiv Satyal hosts the Bollywood Music and Fashion Awards in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in November 2007. |
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Comedian Azhar Usman performs at the Eid festival in Tinley Park, Illinois, January 2006. |
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Washington -- A Muslim, a Christian, a Jew, a Hindu and a
Sikh walk into a bar.
The opening line of a joke?
No, but in this case it was the start of a full evening
of stand-up comedy aimed -- its creators say -- at easing
religious tensions through laughter “and a healthy
dose of political incorrectness.”
Titled “Make Chai, Not War,” the event was
the brainchild of two Indian-American comics, Azhar Usman
and Rajiv Satyal. It grew out of a two-man comedy show previously
mounted by the Muslim Usman and Hindu Satyal.
Usman says they conceived of that earlier show based on
their concern over the “heightened tensions between
those two religious groups in the [South Asian] subcontinent….
To bring Hindu and Muslim together for a comedy showcase,
we thought, was a really good idea.”
They then “pitched each other” on the idea
of adding comics of other religions to the bill, Satyal
says.
The result was the April 25 event at the Hilton Arlington
(Virginia) Hotel near Washington. For that show, they recruited
three more Indian-American comics: Paul Varghese, a Christian;
Harvin Sethi, a Sikh; and Samson Koletkar, who bills himself
-- without serious fear of contradiction -- as “the
world’s only Indian Jewish comedian.”
To push the diversity theme one step further, they added
a George Washington University freshman, Nigerian-American
Madebo Fatunde, as a warm-up act.
While Usman is sure “the show can have a broader
appeal,” the evening’s audience seemed mostly
young and roughly evenly divided between Pakistani Americans
and Indian Americans -- groups that have become increasingly
numerous in the Washington metropolitan area -- with just
a smattering of whites, Asian Americans and African Americans.
That made the audience particularly receptive as the comics
played off not so much their religious differences, but
rather the stereotyped ethnic similarities they share with
each other and much of the audience.
Their listeners responded appreciatively as they told anecdotes
that poked gentle fun at South Asian foibles: from a father’s
problems with English pronunciation, to difficulties being
on time (“We are a people who use the same word for
yesterday and tomorrow,” Usman observed), to perceived
frugality and even personal grooming issues.
By offending everyone equally, they seemed to offend no
one. The audience laughed at the observational humor --
and even louder when the comics occasionally emphasized
a point by using a Hindi or Urdu word.
Stories about being "cheap" seemed especially
numerous and popular. Varghese drew roars of laughter when
he told of his father’s adventures at an airline counter:
offered an upgrade for $100, he asked for a downgrade instead.
“How about you give me $100, and I stand?” Varghese
quoted him.
Asked whether the “Make Chai” showcase reflects
a commitment to diversity or is simply a gimmick, Usman
acknowledged that the answer is probably mixed. “Some
of the comics have a deep commitment to interfaith and bringing
communities together. For others, it’s probably just
another gig,” he said, adding that he puts himself
in the deeply committed category.
Usman tours with a successful all-Muslim comedy group,
“Allah Made Me Funny.” He also has played dozens
of college venues with a rabbi as his comedy partner. (See
“Humor
Helps Break Stereotypes About Muslims.”)
The Chicago-born Usman, 32, said he shifted into stand-up
from a budding career as a lawyer.
Satyal, also 32, from Cincinnati, is an engineer by training.
He began his stand-up career while working in marketing
for the Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble Company.
“Make Chai,” he said in an interview, is “based
upon something that’s important to me: multiculturalism
and diversity.” Those are exemplified in South Asia,
he said; the divisive passions that still exist are real,
“but for the most part, you’ve got over a billion
people who live awfully close to each other. … I think
it’s pretty impressive that they have relative peace.”
In his act, he said, “I try to make statements to
push people a little bit out of their comfort zones. I think
that helps us to open up the dialogue and the debate. …
We’re not here to make fun of religions or cultures.
We’re here to stand on the stage as brothers and say,
‘Hey, it’s OK for us to talk about this stuff.’”
The show’s multiculturalism is underlined by its
19-year-old, Northern Virginia Community College-student
promoter, Raakin Iqbal. Born in Alexandria, Virginia, to
Indian and Pakistani parents, Iqbal started in show business
at age 15 as a disc jockey at family functions. He has developed
into a one-man conglomerate; his Huqa Entertainment provided
event management for the show and his Raakin Iqbal Productions
produced it.
Iqbal already is laying plans to take “Make Chai”
on international tour -- possibly to Pakistan, India and
the United Arab Emirates, for starters -- late in 2008.
Usman and Satyal see that as a realistic possibility.
“We believe there’s a definite international
appeal,” Usman said. With South Asians dispersed around
the English-speaking world, the niche audience exists.
Moreover, he added, “this show can have a broader
appeal. We’re talking to promoters in the United Kingdom
and around the world.”
See also “Arab-American
Comics Use Laughter To Build Bridges” and Diversity.
Watch the video Humor
Breaks Stereotypes:
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