Identity, Pride, and the Bindi: How Desi Women in America Are Reclaiming Their Culture
For many in Edison's Desi community, questions of cultural identity — what to wear, what to display, and what it means to be Indian American — are deeply personal and ever-evolving. A new wave of South Asian women is answering those questions loudly and visibly, one bindi at a time.
🔴 Indian American Women Embrace the Bindi as a Symbol of Cultural Pride
A growing movement of Indian American women, including writer Yati Sanghvi and celebrity sisters Lara and Rhea Raj, are reclaiming the bindi as a proud expression of their South Asian heritage rather than shying away from it in mainstream American spaces. The bindi, a decorative mark traditionally placed at the center of the forehead and associated with the concept of the third eye, carries deep cultural and spiritual significance for many women of Indian descent. For these women, wearing the bindi publicly is an act of cultural affirmation, pushing back against years of pressure to assimilate and downplay visible markers of Indian identity. Lara Raj, a member of the pop group KATSEYE, is among the public figures helping bring this reclamation into mainstream visibility alongside her sister Rhea. [7]
Sources: [7] JoySauce
