Posted by: RR | 8 June 2009

Racism – Where is it?

http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/jugglebandhi/entry/we_re_even_more_racist

We’re even more racist than Aussies Jug Suraiya Monday June 08, 2009

The attacks on Indians in Australia have once again raised the ugly head of racism. Once again India is caught up in the midst of a racist storm. A while ago, the Big Brother controversy launched Shilpa Shetty as an international anti-racism icon from India. This is entirely appropriate as Indians are arguably the biggest targets of racism in the world. And they are targeted not just by unlettered British yobs or Australian thugs but, first and foremost, by their own compatriots. It’s because we are so racist ourselves that we are so quick to react to a racist slur: it takes a racist to catch a racist. And our racism is colour-coded in black-and-white terms: white is intrinsically superior and desirable; black is inferior and undesirable.

In the Indian colour scheme of things, black is far from beautiful. The colloquial word for a black person of African origin is ‘habshi’, an epithet as offensive as the American ‘nigger’, both terms derived from the days of the slave trade.

For all India’s official championing of the anti-apartheid crusade in South Africa’s erstwhile white regime, north India at least is steeped in colour prejudice – ask any African student who’s had a taste of Delhi’s campus life. For the north Indian, fair is lovely, as those abominably tasteless TV commercials keep proclaiming: Don’t get sunburnt, use skin whitening creams, or you’ll end up dark and no one will marry you. (When did you last see a matrimonial ad seeking an ‘attractive, dark-complexioned life partner’?)

Why is dark literally beyond the pale for so many of us? Is it an atavistic throwback to the supposed superiority of ‘white’ Aryans vis-a-vis the ‘non-white’ original inhabitants of the subcontinent? Is it the result of 250 years of white rule under the British? Is a pale skin, as against a deep tan, a testimonial to social rank, segregating those who don’t have to toil under the sun from those who do? Is it an amalgam of all these?

Whatever the reason, ‘chitti chamri’ (fair skin) is a passport to fawning social acceptance — which might partly explain why an increasing number of Caucasians look for assignments in India, be it as MNC executives or bartenders in 5-star hotels.

Our racism is largely, but not exclusively, based on colour. Caste is India’s unique contribution to the lexicon of racial bigotry. Whether ‘caste’ – a result of cultural and social segmentation – can legitimately be conflated with ‘race’ – with its genetic and physiological underpinnings – is a matter of academic debate. However, as only too many horror stories testify, the average rural Dalit fares worse on the human-rights scale than her ‘kafir’ counterpart in the worst days of South African apartheid.

Caste apart, real or imagined ethnic traits compound our racism. People from the north-east are said to have ‘Chinky’ (Chinese) eyes and are routinely asked if they eat dogs. Even in so-called ‘mainstream’ India we sub-divide ourselves with pejoratives: ‘Panjus’, whose only culture is agriculture; stingy ‘Marrus’; mercenary ‘Gujjus’ who eat ‘heavy snakes’ for tea; lazy, shiftless ‘Bongs’; ‘Madrasis’, who all live south of the Vindhyas and speak a funny ‘Illay-po’ language. In our ingrained provincialism is our much-vaunted and illusory unity.

No wonder we can’t stand racism. It reminds us disquietingly of the face we see in our own mirror.


Responses

  1. Connecting the North East!

    It seems almost everyone who follows the news on TV is shocked at the brutal attacks on Indian students abroad. Racism!??? What goes unreported is the ILL – TREATMENT (RACISM) IN OUR OWN LAND that students from the North East of India receive. For the centre and many Indians of other States of the country, the North Eastern part of India is looked upon as a foreign land so the people are treated as outsiders. The only news report anyone can read about the North Eastern States is about militancy and insurgencies. Would anyone like to analyze the reasons for such insurgencies? … Silvie T.

    The following is an extract from the Shillong Times
    June 9, 2009
    http://www.theshillongtimes.com/

    N-E students question racism in India

    …”Media is abuzz with episodes of attacks on Indians in Australia, but many of the incidents of attacks on Northeastern people in India itself remain shrouded in oblivion. We condemn the attacks on Indians in Australia but we want an end to abuse and beating of Northeastern boys and girls, mostly in the capital city. All the cases are of racial nature,” Madhu Chandra, spokesperson of North East Support Centre and Helpline, New Delhi, told IANS on phone.

    “As students from northeast India have already started coming to New Delhi, we are in touch with students’ associations of all the states of the region in Delhi to help the newcomers to settle down in a new city,” added Chandra.

    The centre also runs a helpline service with phone numbers – 98681 84939, 98183 14146, 98681 57066, and 98105 54901 and e-mail address info@nehelpline.net.

    The centre was formed on Sep 22, 2007 to address the
    issue of safety and security of northeastern people in Delhi, as they are often target of “racial attack”, according to Chandra.

    “Not only Australia, India too is racist,” Gyati Talo, a 32-year-old teacher and blogger from Arunachal Pradesh, who did his graduation from a reputed college of New Delhi, told IANS.

    “I was being chased and verbally abused by a bunch of youngsters in a Delhi lane. They abused me because of my short stature and mongoloid features. After the incident, I stopped coming out alone at night during my three-year stay in the city,” Talo said.

    According to the figures available with the centre, around 100 cases of physical and verbal abuse, molestation, rape and beating of boys and girls of the region were reported in Delhi in 2006 and 2007.

    “However in 2008, we received only three episodes of attacks on people of northeast India in Delhi. But they were of heinous nature, pertaining to sexual assaults and beating of women,” rued Chandra.

    This year, till May, the centre had received 12 complaints of harassment, rape, physical and verbal abuse of northeastern people in Delhi.

    “It’s sad that students from northeast India who go to study in various parts of India have to undergo racial prejudice. My daughter also studied in New Delhi. I was surprised when she told me over phone during her stay in the city that her fellow students in the colleges calls her a ‘chinky’, because of her mongoloid features and she was depressed,” said noted Assamese poet and columnist Samir Tanti.

    “Calling someone ‘chinky’ (referring to small eyes) is racial in nature. I know all the Northeastern are known as chinky in Delhi and other parts of India,” the poet said.
    According to an estimate, every year around 80,000-100,000 students from eight states of the region (Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Tripura) go to various places of India for higher studies.

    Favourite study destinations for northeastern students are New Delhi, Bangalore, Pune, Chennai and Hyderabad.
    “However, it is New Delhi from which cases of abuse and harassment are very common,” said Chandra. (IANS)

  2. i believe these incidents happen all over the world but the only thiing is racism in australia is highlighted because of the media sensation…..some believe that australia is a safer and peaceful country and now many believe its not.but i dont get why these issues has to come up now..its because of the sensatioonalisation of the media…..i have decided to do research on it and am glad that i know a thing which many a people dont….atleast i havnt come acrooss….theres an organisation called Association of Australian Education Representatives in India (AAERI) http://www.aaeri.org/ – which is the only regulatory body which works closely with australian and indian government and ensure safety to indian students..but how many of you know that….
    i suggest pls visit the visit the websites know abt the dos and donts in australia then make a decision….


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