North American Bengali Conference

This article or section is written like an advertisement.
Please help rewrite this article from a neutral point of view.
For blatant advertising that would require a fundamental rewrite to become encyclopedic, use {{db-spam}} to mark for speedy deletion. (December 2007)

The North American Bengali Conference is an annual conference held in North America to celebrate Bengali culture. It is usually held around the weekend of, preceding or following July 4. It was one of the first annual conferences for people of South Asian descent in North America. During the event, people discuss various issues affecting the Bengali and Bengali-American community including cultural identity, the future of the community, addressing unique issues affecting the community, networking opportunities, social gatherings, class re-unions, movie showings, literary readings and cultural performances dealing with Bengali culture.

Contents

//

History

Created in 1980 by the Cultural Association of Bengal, the North American Bengali Conference began as a cultural conference that brought together the growing Bengali diasporas of North America. The conference has grown from a gathering of local and regional Bengalis to include attendees, speakers, and performers from all over the world. The purpose of the conference is to create a resurgence in Bengal’s role in the Indian sub-continent and establish a role in the North America. It’s goal is to shift the paradigm of the conference from a focus on socialization and entertainment to more of an emphasis on the exchange of ideas to create a cohesive Bengali identity. The annual conference attempts to have Bengalis organize themselves in a single voice in order to put forth and execute the community’s goals for current and future generations alike.

NABC Youth and Next Generation

NABC Youth is a sub organization of NABC that tries to bring together the youth participating in the conference to help promote a common identity and cultural awareness for the age group. It is unknown when exactly a formal youth organization was set up, but events geared towards the younger generation have been around since the beginning of NABC.

In 2005 at its 25th Anniversary, the NABC decided to create the NABC Next Generation as an evolution of NABC Youth. The thought amongst the organizers was that the 2nd generation of Bengalis had grown beyond the age to be considered “youth” anymore. Thus, they created the Next Generation program to reach out to the unique issues faced by 1.5 or second generation Bengalis born in North America.

Criticism of NABC

Despite its rather large gathering, many feel that there is a lack of understanding of Bengali heritage within the 2nd generation of the Bengali community and beyond. First generation programming has been criticized to not reach out to the 2nd generation to entice them to learn more.

This divide amongst the generation has been prevalent amongst the population as both generations differ considerably with the definition of Bengali culture. Much of the 2nd generation do not pursue traditional or modern Bengali performers but rather elect to follow the better marketed Bollywood movies and Punjabi bhangra dances. Most of the 1st generation, and a small but vocal segment of the 2nd generation, feels that Bengali culture should be authentically Bengali and void of other non-Bengali adulteration. They claim that simply promoting a Bengali performer, many of whom perform other acts not of Bengali origin, does not qualify as promoting Bengali culture.

Furthermore, although NABC is officially secular, most of its participants are Hindu and descend mostly from the state of West Bengal in India. Greater Bengal includes the sovereign nation of Bangladesh, which is mostly Muslim. There has been noticeable Muslim and/or Bangladeshi participation in NABC but not nearly representative of the entire greater Bengali population. The primary reasons for this involve the hostile geopolitics of the Bengal region, with Hindu Bengalis generally suspicious of the militant Islam-dominated Bangladeshis, and suspicions of Hindu Bengalis post the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities.

Past/Future NABC Venues

  • 1980
  • 1981: New York
  • 1982
  • 1983
  • 1984
  • 1985
  • 1986: San Francisco area - Santa Clara Convention Center
  • 1987
  • 1988: Atlantic City - Atlantic City Convention Center
  • 1989
  • 1990
  • 1991 Boston area - Lowell, MA
  • 1992: Toronto
  • 1993
  • 1994: Chicago - Hyatt Regency O’Hare
  • 1995: New York Metro Area - White Plains, New York
  • 1996: Houston-George R. Brown Covention Center
  • 1997: Philadelphia area - King of Prussia
  • 1998: Toronto- Metro Toronto Convention Centre
  • 1999: San Francisco area - Santa Clara, California
  • 2000: Atlantic City - Atlantic City Convention Center
  • 2001: Boston area - Lowell, MA
  • 2002: Atlanta - Georgia World Congress Center
  • 2003: Los Angeles - Long Beach Convention Center
  • 2004: Baltimore-Baltimore Convention Center
  • 2005: New York City - Madison Square Garden
  • 2006: Houston - Hilton Americas & George R. Brown Convention Center
  • 2007: Detroit-Cobo Conference/Exhibition Hall
  • 2008: Toronto-Metro Toronto Convention Centre
  • 2009: San Francisco- McEnery Convention Center, San Jose
  • 2010: Atlantic City- Atlantic City Convention Center

See also

  • Bengali language
  • Bengali people

External links

  • NABC 2008 Home page
  • NABC Youth Home page

References

  1. ^ Dr. Anis Ahmed (July 10, 2004). Arnab’s Love & Concerns for Bengali Culture.

Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_Bengali_Conference
Categories: Bengali culture | Bengalis in the United States | Indian culture | Asian culture | Indian diaspora in the United States | Bangladeshi AmericansHidden categories: Wikipedia articles needing style editing from December 2007 | All articles needing style editing | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2007

Comments are closed.