"This week's incident in Alabama that left an Indian grandfather visiting his American family partially paralysed is horrible and tragic," said Congressman Ami Bera, Co-Chair of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans.
"I'm glad officials have acted quickly to respond and that the FBI has opened an investigation," said Bera, the only Indian American in the current Congress.
Democratic Congresswoman from New York Grace Meng expressed her concern over the incident in Madison city in which Sureshbhai Patel was partially paralysed by a police officer accused of using excessive force on February 6. "The episode in Madison, Alabama is very disturbing," she said.
"We will be watching closely to see what happens with this case, and we hope and pray that Sureshbhai Patel recovers from his injury. We have reason to be concerned over this and other recent incidents that may be directed towards the Muslim and South Asian communities," she said.
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"Our fight against intolerance must continue until all hate crimes are a thing of the past," Meng said as Indian Americans across the country continued to express outrage at the incident in Madison city of Alabama state last week.
"Treatment that was meted to Sureshbhai was inhuman and tragic," said Sampat Shivangi, national president of Indian American Forum for Political Awareness.
In an open letter to President Barack Obama, Shivangi sought justice for Patel.
Eminent Indian American attorney from New York, Ravi Batra has volunteered to offer his services to the family of Patel so that he gets justice from the city of Madison.
"Alabama, the site of the infamous Selma March, a march that shocked America and President Lyndon Baines Johnson to pass the Civil Rights laws, including, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, has much to atone for before it can be free of its evil and inhuman past. Seems, some of its racist ghosts are alive and well in positions of authority," Batra said indicating that this was a racist attack.