| Akhoy Kumar Mozumdar | |
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| Born | 1864 |
| Died | March 9, 1953 San Diego |
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Akhoy Kumar (A.K.) Mozumdar (1864–1-March 9, 1953)[1] was an Indian-born lecturer and writer of the New Thought Movement during the first half of 20th-century United States. He had enjoyed a large following of students and regular readers of his books and pamphlets until he was denaturalized in a decision on American immigration law which reached the United States Supreme Court in 1924.
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In 1913 Mozumdar became the first Indian-born person to earn U.S. citizenship, having convinced the Spokane district judge that he was in fact Caucasian and thereby met the requirements of naturalization law then restricting citizenship to "free white persons".
Ten years later, however, as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind, stipulating that no person of East Indian origin could become a naturalized United States citizen, Mozumdar's citizenship was revoked. A decision on his appeal to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the revocation.[4] He apparently remained, however, in the United States until his death in San Diego in 1953,[1] as he was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.
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