Anand Giridharadas: A tale of two Americas. And the mini-mart where they collided
Anand Giridharadas writes about people and cultures caught amid the great forces of our time. Full bio
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said the pale, tattooed man.
on America since World War II.
the night before, pledges to
or bring justice to our enemies."
by tire shops and strip joints
works the register.
was a big man, an Air Force officer.
fresh start in America.
to save up for I.T. classes
that tattooed man enters the mart.
touch the money.
true American vigilante,
stinging his face.
birdshot pellets puncture his head.
to keep in the brains
begging his God to live.
kicked him out.
60,000 dollars in medical debt,
for an ambulance.
what he could do to repay his God
to give a second chance
deserved no chance at all.
seeking my way in the world.
against my parents,
so damn hard to get out of.
in Mumbai stretched to six years.
amid a magical story:
of the so-called Third World.
and realized something:
America was fracturing
and a republic of fears.
incredible tale of two lives
collided in that Dallas mini-mart.
a book about them,
of America's fracturing
grew no easier.
the hospital discharged him.
so they bounced him.
begged him, "Come home."
a dream to see about.
of white people than the Olive Garden?
he refused alcohol,
would slash his pay.
American pragmatist,
to starve, would he?"
Raisuddin was that Olive Garden's
database administration.
at a blue chip tech company in Dallas.
to work for Raisuddin,
error of the fortunate:
not the exception.
the fortune of being born American
made second chances like his impossible.
childhood horror stories
addiction, crime.
the man who shot him
he had coveted from afar,
another, equally real, America
in that stingier America.
was always the spark of parties,
drugs or fights he'd had the night before.
the three gateways
short of aborting him.
would be at school,
on his fellow classmates.
would be at his grandparents',
a drug-addled and absent father.
he found himself on death row,
he had shot not one mini-mart clerk,
the first institution
were virtuous and caring:
helped him question himself.
of introspection and betterment.
that had defined his life.
the Holocaust survivor
10 years after his crimes,
was fighting to save his life.
eight years after that shooting,
a pilgrimage to Mecca.
he felt immense gratitude,
as he lay dying in 2001,
humanity all his days.
relaying the bricks of a life.
that his method of payment
in the cycle of vengeance
in the name of Islam
and its governor Rick Perry
shot in the face do.
not only by faith.
he had come to believe that Stroman
couldn't just be lethally injected away.
to write my book "The True American."
to be as merciful to a native son
but two Americas collided.
still strives,
can build on today,
lowered expectations,
own narrow kind.
being a newcomer,
other wounded country,
of a native white man.
an urgent parable about America.
generalized decline
where prospects were dimming for everyone.
and the least successful country
of children go hungry.
for large groups,
the world's best hospitals.
that sucks the life from one side,
worryingly perfect.
a sobbing Raisuddin
by the state he so loved.
thought he could still save Stroman,
for the second time ever.
that I am praying for God,
eldest daughter, Amber,
he told her,
a second chance.
a neon shrine to second chances.
to the children of other lands,
to the children of its own.
anybody to become an American.
every American to become a somebody.
foreigners gained American citizenship.
gained a place in the middle class?
and it's even more striking:
has shrunk by 20 percent,
tumbling out of it.
tells me the problem is grimmer
from the unifying center of American life.
and into a global matrix
of down and out
that you are the 99 percent.
in the military,
not the hour,
with a criminal record --
describe you,
a fresh society after slavery,
defeat fascism,
my generation, I believe,
or tax-cut away.
building slicker apps,
artisanal coffee roasting service.
each of us in the flourishing America
and Appalachia,
in that other country,
a more merciful country?
of that America, not only our own.
can cover that America's stories,
bureaus in its midst.
and San Francisco.
make there, live there, pray there.
of a generation.
to dare together.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Anand Giridharadas - WriterAnand Giridharadas writes about people and cultures caught amid the great forces of our time.
Why you should listen
Anand Giridharadas is a writer. He is a New York Times columnist, writing the biweekly "Letter from America." He is the author, most recently, of The True American: Murder and Mercy in Texas, about a Muslim immigrant’s campaign to spare from Death Row the white supremacist who tried to kill him. In 2011 he published India Calling: An Intimate Portrait of a Nation's Remaking, about returning to the India his parents left.
Giridharadas's datelines include Italy, India, China, Dubai, Norway, Japan, Haiti, Brazil, Colombia, Nigeria, Uruguay and the United States. He is an on-air contributor for NBC News and appears regularly on "Morning Joe." He has given talks on the main stage of TED and at Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Yale, Princeton, the University of Michigan, the Aspen Institute, Summit at Sea, the Sydney Opera House, the United Nations, the Asia Society, PopTech and Google. He is a Henry Crown fellow of the Aspen Institute.
Giridharadas lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife, Priya Parker, and their son, Orion.
Anand Giridharadas | Speaker | TED.com