Letter from KCA to Rev. Adam J. Maida, Archbishop of Detroit
A letter from Kerala Catholic Association chairperson Paul V. Dolfus to Rev. Adam J. Maida, the Archbishop of Detroit. In the letter congratulates Maida's recent appointment, and explains the history of the Kerala Catholic community in India and in metro Detroit. The letter also invites Maida to be the chief guest at the 10th anniversary of the KCA.
St. Thomas India Catholic Mission Interim Committee Report
Committee report from the St. Thomas India Catholic Mission in Detroit, dated January 1 - February 12, 1995. The report explains the unanimous decision to dissolve the Kerala Catholic Community (KCC) to form the Mission.
Announcement for Mass and General Body Meeting on February 12th, 1995
Letter from John F. Melepuram to the Kerala Catholic Association dated February 5, 1995, inviting members to a mass and social gathering on February 12, 1995 with invited guest Rev. Mosignor John Zenz, and future programs.
Organizational Description
A two page document with a brief history of India Alert and also describing aims, guiding principles and the structure of the organization.
"Hindus Too Brunette To Vote Here" (1923)
Article from March 10, 1923 issue of The Literary Digest describing the outcome of the 'United States vs. Bhagat Singh Thind' Supreme Court case, which barred South Asians from obtaining citizenship.
The Methods of the Indian Police in the 20th Century
Pamphlet dated November 1915 containing a reprint of "The Methods of the Indian Police in the 20th Century" by Frederick Mackarness, an ex-member of Parliament. In the preface, the editor writes, "His arraignment of British Rule contained herein, must be taken to mean that the worthiest spokesmen of the British nation confess that British rule in India has been an infamous failure."
Har Dayal, "India in America" (1911)
Article from the July 1911 issue of Calcutta-based Modern Review written by Har Dayal, one of the founders of the Gadar Party. Dayal describes the lives of Indians in the United States, with an emphasis on four classes of persons: "the Sikhs, the Swamis and the Students, with the Spies as an abnormal gang." The article is signed off "Berkeley, (Cal.), U.S.A., April 28, 1911."