It began as a community gathering.
In Dallas, a Ganesh Chaturthi event brought families together with devotional songs, drumming, and even a US police officer joining the celebrations.
The aim was simple: recreate the festive atmosphere of India, where dance and music are part of worship.
Video Goes Viral Beyond the Temple
The dance video soon went viral, spreading across WhatsApp and social media.
Reactions were divided. Some called the performances “cringeworthy” and unfit for a religious setting. Others defended them as an expression of culture.
Cultural Norms Clash Abroad
What is routine in India, like Ganesh processions with dance and music, has become a point of debate in the US.
Dallas, home to a large Telugu-speaking community, now finds itself at the centre of this controversy.
Celebration vs. Spectacle
For immigrants, the line between joy and spectacle is often blurred.
Gestures that feel natural in India can be seen differently abroad, shaped by cultural scrutiny.
Even the officer’s participation drew mixed views, seen by some as solidarity and by others as pandering.
Deeper Debate on Identity
This clash goes beyond tradition or taste.
It raises questions of belonging in a space that is neither fully India nor fully America.
Community festivals abroad carry a dual burden: to preserve roots while avoiding judgment.
Perhaps the lesson is empathy and balance—celebrate, but recognise that cultural translation is never seamless.
Dallas video has drawn heavy criticism within the Indian community on WhatsApp groups.
Footage also shows a female police officer taking part in the celebration. At times, Indians in U.S. seem confused about where to draw the line between what’s right and what’s wrong. #Dallas pic.twitter.com/XbdPo39pKP
— M9 USA (@M9USA_) September 4, 2025




