PDA

View Full Version : 'India Is Racist, And Happy About It'



Tabiti
07-26-2009, 09:41 AM
A Black American's first-hand experience of footpath India: no one even wants to change

In spite of friendship and love in private spaces, the Delhi public literally stops and stares. It is harrowing to constantly have children and adults tease, taunt, pick, poke and peer at you from the corner of their eyes, denying their own humanity as well as mine. Their aggressive, crude curiosity threatens to dominate unless disarmed by kindness, or met with equal aggression.

Once I stood gazing at the giraffes at the Lucknow Zoo only to turn and see 50-odd families gawking at me rather than the exhibit

Parents abruptly withdrew infants that inquisitively wandered towards me. I felt like an exotic African creature-cum-spectacle, stirring fear and awe. Even my attempts to beguile the public through simple greetings or smiles are often not reciprocated. Instead, the look of wonder swells as if this were all part of the act and we were all playing our parts.

Racism is never a personal experience. Racism in India is systematic and independent of the presence of foreigners of any hue. This climate permits and promotes this lawlessness and disdain for dark skin. Most Indian pop icons have light-damn-near-white skin. Several stars even promote skin-bleaching creams that promise to improve one’s popularity and career success. Matrimonial ads boast of fair, v. fair and v. very fair skin alongside foreign visas and advanced university degrees. Moreover, each time I visit one of Delhi’s clubhouses, I notice that I am the darkest person not wearing a work uniform. It’s unfair and ugly.

Discrimination in Delhi surpasses the denial of courtesy. I have been denied visas, apartments, entrance to discos, attentiveness, kindness and the benefit of doubt. Further, the lack of neighbourliness exceeds what locals describe as normal for a capital already known for its coldness.

My partner is white and I am black, facts of which the Indian public reminds us daily. Bank associates have denied me chai, while falling over to please my white friend. Mall shop attendants have denied me attentiveness, while mobbing my partner. Who knows what else is more quietly denied?

"An African has come," a guard announced over the intercom as I showed up. Whites are afforded the luxury of their own names, but this careful attention to my presence was not new. ATM guards stand and salute my white friend, while one guard actually asked me why I had come to the bank machine as if I might have said that I was taking over his shift.

It is shocking that people wear liberalism as a sign of modernity, yet revert to ultraconservatism when actually faced with difference. Cyberbullies have threatened my life on my YouTube videos that capture local gawking and eve-teasing. I was even fired from an international school for talking about homosociality in Africa on YouTube, and addressing a class about homophobia against kids after a student called me a ‘fag’.

Outside of specific anchors of discourse such as Reservations, there is no consensus that discrimination is a redeemable social ill. This is the real issue with discrimination in India: her own citizens suffer and we are only encouraged to ignore situations that make us all feel powerless. Be it the mute-witnesses seeing racial difference for the first time, kids learning racism from their folks, or the blacks and northeasterners who feel victimised by the public, few operate from a position that believes in change.

Living in India was a childhood dream that deepened with my growing understanding of India and America’s unique, shared history of non-violent revolution. Yet, in most nations, the path of ending gender, race and class discrimination is unpaved. In India, this path is still rural and rocky as if this nation has not decided the road even worthy. It is a footpath that we are left to tread individually.
http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?250317

Beorn
07-26-2009, 09:56 AM
"An African has come," a guard announced over the intercom as I showed up.

:rotfl:

Brilliant! You can almost hear the urgency and terror in his voice as he said it.

Freomæg
07-26-2009, 10:28 AM
I felt like an exotic African creature-cum-spectacle
Takes on a whole other dimension after learning that the man is gay.

Treffie
07-26-2009, 10:34 AM
In spite of friendship and love in private spaces, the Delhi public literally stops and stares. It is harrowing to constantly have children and adults tease, taunt, pick, poke and peer at you from the corner of their eyes, denying their own humanity as well as mine. Their aggressive, crude curiosity threatens to dominate unless disarmed by kindness, or met with equal aggression.

Doesn't this happen to everyone when they visit India? He's just a big moaning Bess, get over it! If he doesn't like living there, why not move?

Freomæg
07-26-2009, 12:00 PM
Doesn't this happen to everyone when they visit India? He's just a big moaning Bess, get over it! If he doesn't like living there, why not move?
Because people like him believe that any and all ethnocentric sentiment should be eradicated from the entire planet, to make way for him to enjoy his new global community.

Skandi
07-26-2009, 12:02 PM
If your black they stare and if you're white, they want to marry you...

Cato
07-26-2009, 02:45 PM
Eh, the article seems to imply that Indians have never seen a black/colored fellow before. Many of the Dravidians are as dark or darker than black Africans.

I have to wonder if the author is projecting his own worldview onto his experiences in India.

Absinthe
07-26-2009, 03:10 PM
:rolleyes:

India is not racist, they're just simple people that haven't been indoctrinated in political correctness.

Hence, they respond to anything foreign with curiosity and/or suspicion, just like village folks around the world even in officially "non-racist" countries. ;)

Brännvin
07-26-2009, 04:44 PM
The author is utterly biased, he describes the India from an African American point of view, which is totally ridiculous to begin with. You can not judge another culture based solely on their own, try to be a little more neutral, the text is pathetic..

Óttar
07-26-2009, 05:30 PM
Doesn't this happen to everyone when they visit India? He's just a big moaning Bess, get over it! If he doesn't like living there, why not move?

It's true. Indian culture has always had "racist" aspects, aspects which only intensified due to Victorian influence. When I was in India, I thought the racism of Indians put any kind of European colonist to shame.

It drove me insane when all I wanted to do was marvel at the architecture, and check out the wares at all the local shops, only to be mobbed every two seconds by aggressive shop owners and beggars.

You never forget that you're a foreigner in India. I went to the Victoria Memorial Museum and admission was 10 rupees (25 cents) for an Indian, and 100 rupees ($2.25) for an NRI (Non-Resident Indian, AKA "not really Indian" AKA Foreigner), we have to go around a fenced area to find the NRI entrance in 120 degree heat no less. I was absolutely furious, thinking, "It's the god-damned Victoria Memorial! This is my fucking museum, built for my people, by my people (Britishers), if anything, It's YOU who should pay $2.25!"

At the end of the first couple months, you'll be singing "God Save the Queen." You get used to it after a while however, it's certainly not like I'd never go back again.

Absinthe
07-26-2009, 05:39 PM
It drove me insane when all I wanted to do was marvel at the architecture, and check out the wares at all the local shops, only to be mobbed every two seconds by aggressive shop owners and beggars.

You never forget that you're a foreigner in India.

That's not racism, that's socioeconomic bias.

Westerners = Money, and we all know what that means in one of the most poverty stricken countries in the world. ;)

Cato
07-27-2009, 01:43 AM
I can see the influence of the caste system, where the darker Indians like the Dravidians got the crap end of the stick, but the author's attempts to paint India as a bastion for racial intolerance are pretty far-off-the-mark. Rather than acting all offended that the Indians are being Indians, he should simply ask himself this question instead:

Why does my politically correct worldview extent to people who, in many cases, still live a pre-industrial state?