Gujarati in North America

Gujaratis can currently be found in almost every North American major metro city but significant populations of the diaspora live in Metro New York, Toronto, San Franciso, Chicago, Washington D.C, and Dallas. Edison, New Jersey, has become the “Little India” of Metro New York and has the highest concentration of Gujaratis of any community in the United States. Gujaratis have immigrated in three distinct phases. First, educated doctors and engineers came in the mid-1960s. Their extended families started moving in the second phase as those in the first wave sponsored them. In the latest wave, all classes of Patidars started moving to North America and didn’t mind taking up low-level service jobs that would not have been appropriate for them to do back home.
Gujaratis in North America have proven to be successful entrepreneurs. Gujaratis own over 40% of motels in the United States. A majority of these owners are from the Patel community. The first Gujarati hotelier in the United States was Kanji Manchhu Desai, who joined two Gujarati farmworkers in California in 1942 to take over a 32-room hotel in Sacramento, California. In addition, Gujaratis, especially the Patidar, also dominate as franchisees of fast food restaurant chains such as Subway and Dunkin’ Donuts.

Religious Life
About 90 percent of Gujaratis are Hindu. The Vallabhacharya sect of Krishna worshipers has a solid following among the Gujarati Bania (trading) caste. Hinduism is the world’s oldest organized religion, has no single creed, and recognizes no final truth. Therefore, Hinduism in the diaspora varies significantly from community to community.
A Gujarati Hindu attaches great importance to bathing. They observe fasts once a week and every eleventh day in a fortnight. A Gujarati Hindu believes in Heaven, Hell, and the transmigration of the soul. One hopes to better one’s position in this and the life to come by one’s devotion to God, by dan (charity), and by daya (mercy toward fellow human beings).
Hindus observe the major festivals of the Hindu calendar, but Navratri is a special holiday of the Gujaratis. Navratri, literally “nine nights,” is celebrated on the nine nights leading up to Dasahara day. It is a time of joy when men and women gather in village squares and temple compounds to sing and dance. The festival ends on Dasahara day, when artisans worship their tools, farmers their plows, and students their books.
Islam and Jainism are minority religions of the Gujarati. Muslims conquered Gujarat in the thirteenth century AD and ruled for the next 450 years. Today, about 6-8 percent of Gujarati are Muslim, predominantly Sunni Muslims. Jainism, developed out of Hinduism, is comparatively few in numbers but have played a significant role in shaping Gujarati culture.
These are the Gujarati communities in North America most in need of gospel witness
People Group | Metropolitan Area | Population Size | Concentrated Area | Priority Score |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gujarati | New York | 125,454 | Edison (NJ) | 70 |
Gujarati | Houston | 25,456 | Sugar Land | 61 |
Gujarati | Toronto | 70,490 | Brampton | 61 |
Gujarati | Washington D.C. | 21,491 | Calverton | 60 |
Gujarati | Boston | 16,736 | Town of Acton | 59 |
Gujarati | Vancouver | 7,075 | South Vancouver | 58 |
Gujarati | Montreal | 6,970 | Dollard-Des Ormeaux | 55 |
Gujarati | Detroit | 9,457 | Farmington | 54 |
Gujarati | Miami | 5,762 | Plantation | 53 |
Gujarati | Atlanta | 26,019 | Big Creek | 52 |
Gujarati | Calgary | 6,500 | Horizon | 52 |
Gujarati | Edmonton | 6,730 | Strathcona Industrial Park | 52 |
Gujarati | Orlando | 7,603 | Willamsburg | 52 |
Gujarati | San Francisco | 29,547 | Fremont | 52 |
Gujarati | Tampa | 6,001 | Brandon | 51 |
Gujarati | Charlotte | 7,465 | Mallard Creek | 46 |
Gujarati | Dallas Fort Worth | 19,822 | Plano | 46 |
Gujarati | Raleigh | 8,207 | Shiloh | 45 |
Gujarati | Chicago | 53,444 | Georgetown | 44 |
Gujarati | Los Angeles | 25,666 | Woodbury | 44 |
Gujarati | Philadelphia | 36,953 | Hatfield | 43 |