US President Donald Trump’s senior trade adviser, Peter Navarro , has stirred controversy with his recent comments on India’s energy trade with Russia. In an interview with Fox News, Navarro accused Indian refiners of acting as a “laundromat for the Kremlin” and claimed “Brahmins are profiteering at the expense of the Indian people.” While aimed at India’s economic and political elite, his use of the term “Brahmin” quickly went viral on social media, with many Indians calling it casteist and racist. Others noted that in the United States, “ Boston Brahmins” referred to a very different kind of elite, white, Protestant families descended from early English settlers who dominated Boston’s wealth, politics, and culture for centuries.
The origin of the term " Boston Brahmins "
The phrase “Boston Brahmin” was coined in 1861 by author Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. In New England, the term came to describe a small, exclusive group of Anglo-Saxon Protestant families who traced their lineage back to the earliest English colonists of Massachusetts Bay. They were often called the “First Families of Boston” and came to dominate the city’s wealth, politics, and culture for over two centuries.
The Boston Brahmins were not just wealthy but embodied a cultural identity: white, Protestant, English-descended, and highly educated. They built fortunes in trade ranging from shipping and rum to textiles and later real estate before becoming patrons of elite institutions. Families like the Cabots, Lowells, and Saltonstalls symbolised this class, with generations educated at Ivy League universities and raised to value discretion, restraint, and civic service. Their social standing was reinforced by insularity as they often married within their circle to preserve lineage.
A well-known rhyme captured their exclusivity:
“And this is good old Boston, the home of the bean and the cod, where the Lowells talk only to Cabots, and the Cabots talk only to God.”
From England to Boston: How the Brahmin class was born
The Boston Brahmins traced their ancestry to English Puritan settlers who arrived in Massachusetts in the early 1600s. Many came from East Anglia, a region of England known for its devout Protestantism, and were part of the Great Migration of Puritans fleeing religious persecution under King Charles I. These settlers established the Massachusetts Bay Colony, with Boston quickly becoming its cultural and political hub.
Over time, the descendants of these families consolidated their influence through land ownership, shipping, and trade. Their English heritage gave them both social prestige and a sense of superiority over later waves of immigrants, particularly Irish Catholics. This connection to England shaped their traditions, accent, and aristocratic identity, which came to define the “Boston Brahmin” class.
Cultural power and influence
Boston Brahmins shaped New England’s intellectual and political life. They founded schools such as Boston Latin, Groton, Andover, and Exeter, and became patrons of Harvard University and MIT. They also supported the arts, philanthropy, and public service. US Presidents John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, as well as poet T.S. Eliot, were all descended from Brahmin families.
Their influence, however, was not without critics. While they prided themselves on supporting abolitionism, they fiercely opposed immigration, fearing Irish Catholics and other newcomers would disrupt their hold on Boston society. They were also seen as aloof, elitist, and resistant to social change.
Social media backlash over Peter Navarro’s remark
Navarro’s comments ignited fierce debate online. Many called the remark “racist” and “casteist,” accusing him of using an orientalist lens to frame India’s global trade behaviour. Others pointed out the irony of invoking Boston Brahmins, a group remembered for their elitism, exclusionary practices, and suspicion of immigrants, while attacking India’s foreign policy. The controversy underscored how terms embedded in one society’s history can create confusion, stereotypes, and backlash when used in another cultural context.
The origin of the term " Boston Brahmins "
The phrase “Boston Brahmin” was coined in 1861 by author Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. In New England, the term came to describe a small, exclusive group of Anglo-Saxon Protestant families who traced their lineage back to the earliest English colonists of Massachusetts Bay. They were often called the “First Families of Boston” and came to dominate the city’s wealth, politics, and culture for over two centuries.
The Boston Brahmins were not just wealthy but embodied a cultural identity: white, Protestant, English-descended, and highly educated. They built fortunes in trade ranging from shipping and rum to textiles and later real estate before becoming patrons of elite institutions. Families like the Cabots, Lowells, and Saltonstalls symbolised this class, with generations educated at Ivy League universities and raised to value discretion, restraint, and civic service. Their social standing was reinforced by insularity as they often married within their circle to preserve lineage.
A well-known rhyme captured their exclusivity:
“And this is good old Boston, the home of the bean and the cod, where the Lowells talk only to Cabots, and the Cabots talk only to God.”
From England to Boston: How the Brahmin class was born
The Boston Brahmins traced their ancestry to English Puritan settlers who arrived in Massachusetts in the early 1600s. Many came from East Anglia, a region of England known for its devout Protestantism, and were part of the Great Migration of Puritans fleeing religious persecution under King Charles I. These settlers established the Massachusetts Bay Colony, with Boston quickly becoming its cultural and political hub.
Over time, the descendants of these families consolidated their influence through land ownership, shipping, and trade. Their English heritage gave them both social prestige and a sense of superiority over later waves of immigrants, particularly Irish Catholics. This connection to England shaped their traditions, accent, and aristocratic identity, which came to define the “Boston Brahmin” class.
Cultural power and influence
Boston Brahmins shaped New England’s intellectual and political life. They founded schools such as Boston Latin, Groton, Andover, and Exeter, and became patrons of Harvard University and MIT. They also supported the arts, philanthropy, and public service. US Presidents John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, as well as poet T.S. Eliot, were all descended from Brahmin families.
Their influence, however, was not without critics. While they prided themselves on supporting abolitionism, they fiercely opposed immigration, fearing Irish Catholics and other newcomers would disrupt their hold on Boston society. They were also seen as aloof, elitist, and resistant to social change.
Social media backlash over Peter Navarro’s remark
Navarro’s comments ignited fierce debate online. Many called the remark “racist” and “casteist,” accusing him of using an orientalist lens to frame India’s global trade behaviour. Others pointed out the irony of invoking Boston Brahmins, a group remembered for their elitism, exclusionary practices, and suspicion of immigrants, while attacking India’s foreign policy. The controversy underscored how terms embedded in one society’s history can create confusion, stereotypes, and backlash when used in another cultural context.
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