Monday, April 13, 2026
23.1 C
New Delhi

The $200,000 microwave meltdown: How palak paneer triggered an academic fire alarm

The $200,000 microwave meltdown: How palak paneer triggered an academic fire alarm

The TOI correspondent from Washington: Universities often like to think of themselves as marketplaces of ideas. At the University of Colorado, Boulder, that marketplace briefly became a battleground over aromas, ending with a $200,000 settlement, two Indian PhD students exiled from campus for life, and a cautionary tale about what happens when cultural sensitivity collides with a communal microwave.The saga began modestly in September 2023, with lunch. Aditya Prakash, 34, a fully funded PhD student in anthropology, attempted to reheat a container of palak paneer in a shared faculty kitchen. According to court filings, a staff member objected, declaring the spinach-and-cottage cheese curry “pungent,” and instructing him to stop using the microwave for such food.Prakash, an anthropologist by training and temperament, declined to swallow the rebuke quietly. While it is not unusual for Indian renters to be denied digs by landlords on culinary grounds (“smell of curry) , he pointed out that shared kitchens are, by definition, shared, and that judgments about smell are culturally conditioned. When staff allegedly responded that even broccoli could be considered too odorous, Prakash offered a line that would later echo through legal briefs and social media alike: “How many groups face racism because they eat broccoli?”What might have ended as an awkward lunchtime exchange instead escalated into a full-course administrative response. According to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed in May 2025, the university initiated what Prakash’s lawyers described as a “pattern of retaliation.” He was summoned to meetings and told that his insistence on reheating his food had made staff “feel unsafe,” language the complaint argued was being stretched from concern to cudgel.The heat quickly spread to Prakash’s colleague, Urmi Bhattacharyya, also a doctoral student. After she invited him to speak to her class about ethnocentrism—using the incident as a teaching example—her teaching assistantship was abruptly terminated. Matters worsened when she and several peers later shared Indian food on campus in a show of solidarity, only to be accused, according to the lawsuit, of “inciting a riot.”If the dispute had stopped at disciplinary letters, it might have cooled. Instead, the university declined to award the pair the master’s degrees they had already earned on their way to doctorates. Their attorney, Tyrone Glover, argued the move effectively held their academic records hostage, turning a lunchroom spat into a civil rights issue with six-figure implications.By the fall of 2025, CU Boulder settled. The terms were as striking as the origin story: $200,000 to cover emotional distress and legal fees, formal conferral of the delayed degrees—but a permanent “no reentry” clause barring both students from ever studying or working at the university again.University officials denied wrongdoing, saying established procedures had been followed. Prakash, now back in India with his degree but without any desire to return, struck a resigned note, citing visa uncertainty and sheer exhaustion after two years of fighting.The university has since scrubbed references to “pungent food” from internal guidance. The lesson, however, lingers: when institutions try to regulate the spice level of campus life, they may find themselves paying dearly for the burn. Go to Source

Hot this week

Spain’s PM Pedro Sanchez seeks closer ties with China amid strained relations with US

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez begins a three-day visit to China on Monday, aiming to strengthen trade ties with the world’s second-largest economy as relations with the United States show signs of strain. Read More

Orban loses power in Hungary after 16-year rule as Peter Magyar secures landslide victory

Hungary’s long-serving Prime Minister Viktor Orban conceded defeat after 16 years in power, as conservative challenger Peter Magyar secured a landslide victory with a two-thirds majority, marking a major political shift and signaling a renewed alignm Read More

Asha Bhosle passes away: ‘With Umrao Jaan, she gave Lucknow a permanence’

Asha Bhosle was never just a voice; she was a presence – one that entered a moment and made it eternal. Read More

Before women’s quota bill session, PM Modi steps up direct outreach

NEW DELHI: PM Narendra Modi will address eminent personalities and women achievers from different sectors on Monday as he steps up his direct outreach to people to build support for bills proposing the implementation of women’s Read More

US blocks ‘all maritime traffic’ to Iran ports after Islamabad talks fail, allows Hormuz passage

The US military has announced it will begin blockading all Iranian Gulf ports on Monday at 1400 GMT (April 13), while allowing vessels not bound for Iran to continue transiting the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz. Read More

Topics

Spain’s PM Pedro Sanchez seeks closer ties with China amid strained relations with US

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez begins a three-day visit to China on Monday, aiming to strengthen trade ties with the world’s second-largest economy as relations with the United States show signs of strain. Read More

Orban loses power in Hungary after 16-year rule as Peter Magyar secures landslide victory

Hungary’s long-serving Prime Minister Viktor Orban conceded defeat after 16 years in power, as conservative challenger Peter Magyar secured a landslide victory with a two-thirds majority, marking a major political shift and signaling a renewed alignm Read More

Asha Bhosle passes away: ‘With Umrao Jaan, she gave Lucknow a permanence’

Asha Bhosle was never just a voice; she was a presence – one that entered a moment and made it eternal. Read More

Before women’s quota bill session, PM Modi steps up direct outreach

NEW DELHI: PM Narendra Modi will address eminent personalities and women achievers from different sectors on Monday as he steps up his direct outreach to people to build support for bills proposing the implementation of women’s Read More

US blocks ‘all maritime traffic’ to Iran ports after Islamabad talks fail, allows Hormuz passage

The US military has announced it will begin blockading all Iranian Gulf ports on Monday at 1400 GMT (April 13), while allowing vessels not bound for Iran to continue transiting the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz. Read More

Cabaret to global pop, Asha lived ‘crossover’ before it was buzzword

Asha Bhosle There are singers who belong to an era, and then there is Asha Bhosle, who treated decades like passing trends she would dip into and then outdo. Read More

West Bengal polls: Chandra Bose joins TMC, attacks BJP

Subhas Chandra Bose’s grandnephew, Chandra Bose, joined TMC on Sunday in the presence of state education minister Bratya Basu and party MP Kirti Azad, reports Prithvijit Mitra. Read More

Hate crimes targeting Sikh Americans in US rose 3,700% in a decade: FBI report

Hate crimes targeting Sikh Americans in the United States have risen over the past decade, increasing by about 3,700%, according to preliminary FBI data cited by Axios. Read More

Related Articles