Finding Your Mustard Oil

have you guys heard of mustard oil

chances are if you’re not south asian

the answer is no mustard oil is produced

from the seeds of the mustard plant

and it’s known for its strong flavor

pungent aroma

and its role as a staple ingredient in

bangladeshi cuisine

i’m saying that there are entire dishes

dedicated to cooking with it

that you won’t find in its neighboring

countries this is like tehari

which is an aromatic rice with beef

potatoes chilies and onions

that’s doused in mustard oil

or ilishmach the national fish of

bangladesh

a stir fry that’s covered in mustard

seeds and oil

now before the south asian history

police come for me

i know that it’s used in india and

pakistan as well

[Music]

but not to the same extent that is used

in bangladesh

bangladesh where i was born is a place

that

some of you at rutgers may have heard of

and most of the world

has not it’s a country that fought for

its language

and gained its independence in 1971.

shout out to baba who was a freedom

fighter in the war for liberation

shut but due to its history colonialism

and other factors it’s been ignored and

overlooked in the larger conversation

of the south asian diaspora shout out to

nepal sri lanka

we see you too but that’s why mustard

oil is so important to us

it’s a niche ingredient that makes us

different

it represents our history

and it is a metaphor for our cultural

pride

i’m an artist and entrepreneur that

moved from bangladesh to queens new york

city

i’m an immigrant kid that made rap money

and turned myself into a brand

the world has never seen someone like me

before

the same way you’ve never seen mustard

oil

my name is anik khan and i use music and

pop culture

to tell the stories of underrepresented

communities to make sure they don’t get

erased

all right so boom my story begins in the

most

magical place in the world queens new

york

queens holds the guinness world record

for being the most ethnically diverse

area

on the planet it’s also the most

linguistically diverse with at least 138

languages spoken throughout the entire

borough

as mad people and mad languages

i grew up around all these cultures

attending backyard west indian functions

trying sorrow for the first time eating

that epis after school with my

venezuelan homies

my friend circle literally looked like

the united nations

according to psychologists nancy

eisenberg claire hoffer

and julie vaughn kids with diverse

friends or

cross group friends as social

psychologists like to call it

have a higher level of social competence

increase self-esteem and resilience

and show more leadership potential i

didn’t know it then

but that diversity and friendship might

have been the most important part to my

growth as an artist and entrepreneur

it taught me the intricacies of

different cultures and why it’s

important not to paint with a broad

brush

something that pop culture does way too

often

when you think of the caribbean islands

high chance you’re thinking of jamaica

maybe jerk chicken but what about

countries like trinidad

barbados guyana they each have their own

mustard oil

that one ingredient a dish that sets

them apart

yet we rarely hear about them guyana has

pepper pot

trinidad has doubles places in the

middle east

and north africa like morocco and

philistine

are miles away from each other

yet they’re grouped as the same people

that’s dangerous

these intricacies and ingredients are

parallel to the intricacies within its

people

you can’t just act like they don’t exist

that’s why i’m here today that’s why i’m

on this stage

i make sure that these intricacies get

highlighted in mainstream culture

because if i don’t who will

as an artist people know me for blending

genres like dancehall

afrobeat panra ballet funk and more

you know that clave that

that’s been the most natural way for me

to pay homage to my upbringing and the

people that surrounded me

but as i’ve grown as an artist it’s

become just as important for me to

showcase these cultures through other

platforms

in 2018 i partnered with the largest

food festival in america

i put an egyptian halal truck a halal

thai restaurant

and a bengali street food stall next to

prominent names and food

like casa enrique shake shack and john

and vinnie’s

i needed to make sure that my borough

was represented in a real way

and that these local businesses were

exposed to platforms that

otherwise might have overlooked them

for my first line of merchandise i

partnered with another set of local

restaurants

as you can see i’m a big foodie

that i felt made the ingredients to my

music

trinidadian roti north african chicken

over rice

and chinese fast food i wanted to make

sure

that their menus and contact info

were on sustainable high-end fabrics for

my fans

to be exposed to underrepresented

communities through fashion

esquire magazine claimed and i quote

anik khan is making merchandise exciting

again

not to toot my own harm but

2-2 in 2019 right before the pandemic

i opened up the first bengali on chai

cafe goku to chai

with partners ani and ayan sanyo

we created a physical space for people

across multiple diasporas

to enjoy south asian chai made and sold

by south asian people

to think that chai was introduced to

america and mainstream culture

by non-south asian old companies like

starbucks

blows my mind still

that’s like if dominoes was your first

experience of italian neapolitan pizza

no shade the dominoes respectfully

but they’d be misrepresenting the

culture just like starbucks did

they took our chai and called it chai

tea which literally means

t t

we felt like it was our responsibility

to take the narrative back

and let you all know that is

just chai as you can see

i’m no stranger to the different

mustardos across the globe

but this is just the beginning and

there’s so many other

niches to learn about and support people

like bilkis abdul qadir

a black american hijabi basketball

player that played d1 basketball

where’s her nike commercial or dj uska

a sri lankan dj an activist

where’s her radio show or isl

slay a saudi rapper that was ordered

for an arrest for making a rap record

about her city

where’s her netflix documentary my

decision

to put my community first has not been

easy

i carved a space for myself and others

that to this point has been way too

convenient to ignore until now

i’ve risked my career as an artist to

build bridges

to increase the visibility of the people

and places that need it

the purpose of my art is to connect the

people who felt overlooked

with the people who felt seen we all

know that being exposed to diverse

cultures

is undeniably good for the human

experience

research shows that it leads to more

understanding cultural competence

leadership and empathy skills that are

critical to compete in the 21st century

but the upside of diversity is a recent

phenomenon

it has been politicized and polarized

for so long

that we haven’t had the chance to study

the affordances of its positive impact

more importantly we can’t rely on

research alone to propel

this movement i’m inspired to move these

cultures forward

because academia can’t do it alone and

that isn’t a knock on academia

but social movements don’t grow from a

citation

they grow from people witnessing

something that’s powerful and real

something relatable and what’s more

relatable than food music and pop

culture

but that’s just the beginning you have

to be open to the people around you

the friendships you make the communities

you build

and when i say people i don’t mean just

any people i mean the people of the

world doesn’t expect you to be around

but that’s a ted talk for another day

when you come from niche culture it’s

hard to see yourself as a part of the

larger conversation

it’s even harder to see yourself as a

part of pop culture

there’s an emphasis on eurasia and

assimilation

we have been designed to think

that we don’t have our own mustard oils

but

everyone has their own perspective and

identity

pop culture has been historically bland

i’ve rocks with salt and pepper but it’s

time to see things like cumin

turmeric and butter

so before i leave today i want to ask

you this

what are you bringing to the table

what’s your mustard oil

thank you

free philistine facilia free yemen

free the farmers out in punjab this has

been a foreign affair conversation

你们听说过芥子油

吗?如果您不是南亚人

,答案是芥子油不是

从芥菜植物的种子中提取的

,它以其强烈的

辛辣香气

和作为孟加拉国菜的主要成分而

闻名

我是说,有很多

专门用它来烹饪的菜肴

,你在

邻国是

找不到的

bangladesh 在南亚历史警察来找我之前,现在用芥末籽和油覆盖的炒菜

我知道它也用于印度和

巴基斯坦

[音乐],

但程度不如我在孟加拉国使用的

程度 出生是一个

你在罗格斯大学的一些人可能听说过的地方,

而世界上大多数人

都没有听说过它是一个为

自己的语言

而战并在 1971 年获得独立的国家。

向 bab 呐喊 一个

在解放战争中曾是自由战士的人

关闭了,但由于其历史殖民主义

和其他因素,在南亚侨民的更大对话中被忽视和

忽视

了向

尼泊尔大喊大叫斯里兰卡

我们也看到你,但这就是芥子油的原因

对我们来说是如此重要

它是一种使我们与众不同的利基成分

它代表了我们的

历史 它是我们文化自豪感的隐喻

我是

从孟加拉国搬到纽约皇后区的艺术家和企业家

我是一个移民孩子 说唱钱

,把自己变成一个

品牌 世界上从未见过像我

这样的人,就像你从未见过芥末

一样 不要被

抹去,

所以繁荣,我的故事开始于世界上

神奇的地方皇后区

纽约

皇后区拥有吉尼斯世界纪录

,成为种族最多样化的

地区

在这个星球上,它也是

语言最多样化的,整个行政区至少有 138

种语言

作为疯狂的人和疯狂的语言

我在所有这些文化中长大,

参加西印度后院

的活动,第一次尝试悲伤

,放学后和我一起吃那个 Epis

委内瑞拉

朋友 我的朋友圈从字面上看起来

像联合国

根据心理学家

南希艾森伯格克莱尔霍夫

和朱莉沃恩孩子有不同的

朋友或

跨群体的朋友社会

心理学家喜欢称之为

具有更高水平的社交能力

提高自尊心和适应力

和 展示更多的领导潜力我

当时并不知道,

但多样性和友谊

可能是我作为艺术家和企业家成长的最重要的部分,

它教会了我不同文化的复杂性

以及为什么

不要用粗笔绘画很重要

当你想到 ca 时,流行文化经常做的事情 ribbean Islands

很有可能你会想到牙买加,

也许是混蛋鸡,但是

像特立尼达巴巴多斯圭亚那这样的国家呢,

他们每个人都有自己的

芥末油

,一种成分,一道菜,让

它们与众不同,

但我们很少听说他们圭亚那有

胡椒罐,

特立尼达有双打

中东

和北非的地方,如摩洛哥和

市侩

,相距数英里,

但它们被归为同一类人

,这很危险 ‘不存在

这就是我今天在这里的原因 这就是我

在这个舞台上的原因

我确保这些错综复杂的事物

在主流文化中得到强调

因为如果我不这样做,

作为一名艺术家,人们会认识我,因为我融合了

诸如 dancehall

afrobeat panra 之类的流派 芭蕾放克和更多

你知道

那是我向我的成长和围绕我的人致敬的最自然的方式,

但正如我已经 作为一名艺术家,在 2018 年通过其他平台展示这些文化

对我来说同样重要

我与美国最大的

美食节合作

我在知名人士旁边放置了一辆埃及清真卡车、一家清真

泰国餐厅

和一个孟加拉街头小吃摊

像 casa enrique shake shack 和 john

and vinnie’s 这样的食物

我需要确保我的

自治市镇以真实的方式

呈现,并且这些本地企业暴露在平台上,

否则这些平台可能会

因为我的第一批商品而

忽略它们

如您所见,我是一个大美食家

,我觉得我的音乐配料

特立尼达罗蒂北非

鸡肉米饭

和中国快餐我想

确保他们的菜单和联系信息

是可持续的高端 通过时尚绅士杂志声称

我的

粉丝可以接触到代表性不足的

社区的面料

,我引用了

anik khan 正在制作 merc 再次令人兴奋

不是为了伤害自己,而是

在 2019 年 2-2 就在大流行之前,

我在

chai 咖啡馆 goku 上

与合作伙伴 ani 和 ayan sanyo 一起开设了第一家孟加拉语的 chai

我们为多个侨民的人们创造了一个物理空间

来享受南方 asian chai

由南亚

人制造和销售 认为 chai 是

由非南亚老公司(如星巴克)引入美国和主流文化的,

这让我大吃一惊,就像多米诺骨牌是你第一次

体验意大利那不勒斯披萨

但他们

会像星巴克一样曲解文化

我对全球不同的芥末酱并不陌生,

但这只是一个开始,

还有很多其他

领域可以了解和支持人们

l ike bilkis abdul qadir

一位美国黑人 hijabi 篮球

运动员,打过 d1 篮球

,她的耐克广告在哪里 或 dj

uska 一位斯里兰卡 dj 一位活动家

,她的广播节目在哪里

城市她的 Netflix 纪录片在哪里 我

决定

把我的社区放在首位并不

容易

我为自己和其他人开辟了一个空间,

到目前为止,这太

方便了以至于不能忽视直到现在

我冒着作为艺术家的职业风险来

建立

桥梁 提高

需要它的人和地方的知名度

我的艺术的目的是将

感到被忽视

的人和感到被忽视的人联系起来 我们都

知道,不可否认,接触不同的

文化对人类体验有好处

研究表明 导致更多地

了解文化能力

领导力和同理心技能,这

对 21 世纪的竞争至关重要,

但多样性的好处是最近的 这种

现象已经被政治化和两极分化

了很长时间

,以至于我们没有机会研究

其积极影响的

可供性,更重要的是,我们不能仅仅依靠

研究来推动

这场运动,我受到鼓舞推动这些

文化向前发展

因为学术界不能单独做到这一点,

这不是对学术界的打击,

而是社会运动不是从

引用

中发展出来的,而是从人们目睹

强大而真实的东西相关的东西,以及

比美食音乐和流行文化更相关的东西中

发展出来的,

但是 这只是开始 你

必须对周围的人开放

你建立的友谊 你建立

的社区 当我说人时,我指的不是

任何人 我是指

世界上的人不希望你在身边

但这是另一天的 ted 演讲

当你来自小众文化时

很难将自己视为

更大对话的一部分 更难将自己视为

流行文化的一部分

有一个他们 欧亚大陆和

同化阶段

我们被设计成

认为我们没有自己的芥子油,

每个人都有自己的观点和

身份

流行文化在历史上一直很乏味

我有盐和胡椒的岩石,但现在是

时候看看像 孜然

姜黄和黄油

所以在我今天离开之前我想问

这是你带来了

什么芥末油

谢谢你

免费的市侩facilia免费的也门解放旁遮普邦

的农民这

是一次外交谈话