The Indian community in the United States reached out over the weekend in solidarity with the victims of an apparent hate crime in which an Indian engineer was shot dead in a Kansas bar.
Many community members remain in shock over the late Wednesday shooting in Olathe, a suburb of Kansas City, when a drunk white man allegedly opened fire on two young Indian engineers, screaming racial slurs and telling them “Get out of my country.”
“There´s no place for senseless violence & bigotry in our society,” tweeted Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, one of the most prominent Americans of Indian descent.
“My heart is with the victims & families of the horrific shooting in Kansas,” he wrote on Saturday.
One of the engineers – Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32 – was shot dead at the bar. His friend, 32-year-old Alok Madasani, was wounded in the shooting. He has since been released from the hospital.
A white bar patron who tried to help and is being hailed as a hero, identified as Ian Grillot, was wounded and remains hospitalized.
Local police said the suspect, Adam Purinton, 51, is under arrest and faces an initial court hearing on Monday.
Purinton was arrested after police got a tip from a bartender in a nearby town that the suspect boasted of having killed two Middle Eastern men, the Kansas City Star reported.
A GoFundMe online fundraiser page was quickly set up after the shooting, and as of Sunday had collected more than $600,000, much of it in small contributions of $5 and $10.
The money is to help with the funeral expenses “and other ongoing grief / recovery support costs” for Kuchibhotla’s widow Sunayana Dumala.
“This includes the very expensive process of carrying his mortal remains back to India, so his parents can say goodbye one last time to their beloved son,” the page says.
Dumala told a press conference Friday at Garmin, where her late husband worked as an aviation systems engineer, that she was initially concerned about racism in the United States.
“We’ve read many times in newspapers of some kind of shooting happening,” she said, according to the Star. “And we always wondered, how safe?”
Dumala said it was due to her husband’s optimism that they emigrated and that she eventually found a job.
After the funeral in India Dumala said she wants to resume her US life and honor her husband’s memory by being “successful in any field I choose,” the newspaper said.
There are believed to be some 300,000 residents of Indian descent living in the United States.
Join GhanaStar.com to receive daily email alerts of breaking news in Ghana. GhanaStar.com is your source for all Ghana News. Get the latest Ghana news, breaking news, sports, politics, entertainment and more about Ghana, Africa and beyond.