Eamon de Valera, "India and Ireland" (1920)
Published by the New York-based Friends of Freedom for India, India and Ireland (1920) by Eamon De Valera, the leader of the revolutionary Irish Republic, is a pamphlet that provides a comparison between India and Ireland's colonization by the British.
Young India (November 1920)
The November 1920 issue of Young India (Vol. 3, No. 11) devotes most of its pages to the special session of the Indian National Congress, held in Calcutta that September. The issue contains an overview of the Calcutta Congress and its resolutions, and also quotes from speeches by Lajpat Rai, Gandhi, B. Chakravarthi.
Bahi Jodh Singh, "The Message of the Sikh Faith"
An undated booklet titled "The Message of the Sikh Faith" written by Bahi Jodh Singh, Professor of Divinity at Khalsa College, Amritsar, edited by Teja Singh, a member of the Ghadar party. The booklet was published by the Pacific Coast Khalsa Diwan in Stockton, California.
"The Heathen Invasion of America" (1911)
In this November 1911 article from the Current Literature, an unnamed author stirs fears of a "heathen invasion" in the U.S.
Girindra Mukerji, "The Hindu in America" (1908)
In "The Hindu in America," an article from the April 1908 issue of Overland Monthly, Girindra Mukerji, a student at the University of California, writes about the Indian presence in the U.S.. The editorial note also remarks on the 1907 riots in Bellingham, Washington.
Agnes Foster Buchanan, "The West and the Hindu Invasion" (1908)
In "The West and the Hindu Invasion," an article from the April 1908 issue of Overland Monthly, Agnes Foster Buchanan writes about the "Hindu Invasion" as the "latest racial problem" to impact the West coast, following the earlier migrations of Chinese and Japanese.
French Strother, "Fighting Germany's Spies IX: The Hindu-German Conspiracy" (1918)
In ninth installment of "Fighting Germany's Spies" in the September 1918 issue of This World's Work (vol. 36), French Strother emphasizes the sensational qualities of the Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial: "The climax produced several executions, one suicide, two cases of insanity, and a murder.
A Hindu Miracle Man Will Cure Lum (1941)
An episode from "Lum and Abner," an American radio comedy that aired as a network program from 1932 to 1954 and was created by co-stars Chester Lauck (who played Columbus "Lum" Edwards) and Norris Goff (Abner Peabody). Set in the fictitious town of Pine Ridge, the show regularly played on "hillbilly" humor.
Kuldip Singh and Fans Outside Studio
Singer Kuldip Singh swarmed by female fans, outside a room marked Studio D. Photograph commissioned by Life magazine and taken by Allan Grant.
Kuldip Singh on George Gobel Show
Kuldip Singh performing "Love, You Don't Owe Me a Thing" on the George Gobel Show. Photograph commissioned by Life magazine in 1956, and taken by Allan Grant.