Eventually, Mahajan’s father died. But by the time he was ready to return to the U.S., a wave of new pandemic restrictions had taken effect, including closure of the U.S. embassies and consulates in India.
He was told he couldn’t make an appointment to get cleared to go home until Feb. 2022. That meant he would be separated from his family, his job, and his adopted home for almost a year.
“I was very pessimistic,” he said. His wife, Neha Mahajan, said she struggled to explain the dilemma to their daughters.
“Every night that we spent on two different continents, my girls would ask me, ‘When is Daddy coming home?’” she said. “And I really did not have an answer for them.”
It was at that point, though, that the couple got in touch with the office of Bob Menendez, a Democratic U.S. Senator from New Jersey.
Menendez chairs the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, and his office reached out to the State Department and shared the Mahajan family’s predicament. They were able to get him an expedited appointment with the embassy in New Delhi, despite the restrictions, and got him back home to Scotch Plains.