Indian contempt for Africans
By : Bikram Vohra
No campus erupted in shrill protest against the mob that stripped a Tanzanian lady student in Bengaluru and paraded her because she was black.
No women’s association called for a sit-in and demanded action because she was black. The great social platform of Twitter and Facebook received no trains so to speak because she was black. No real time rallying for the righteous, which is such a popular sport. Nationwide rage stayed muted.
Of course, we are racist. We have always been racist. It is part of our casteist culture that we need to look down on someone even as we look up to our “betters.” This attitude confirms our affection for hierarchy.
In 1971, when I was a reporter with the Times in Delhi the Commonwealth Youth delegation arrived with 16 white people and two black Brits. I vividly recall Simon telling me how he found it odd that not one Indian family invited these two to their home while happily hosting the other sixteen. In the two weeks they stayed in India they never saw the inside of an Indian home. Nothing has changed, Simon, we still won’t invite you, mate, you embarrass us.
I had a very close female friend from Uganda in Mumbai and whenever we would go out for a movie or into a shop we would run a gauntlet of leering, sneering men. They would often give me that wink, wink, nod, nod grin as if to say, yar maza le raha hai (Hey! Buddy having fun?).
It was so mindboggling offensive. And Rona would turn to me and say, you people have a major problem, you actually feel superior. Much of it is fear of the stereotype. Africans, to us, are either into drugs or selling counterfeit currency or engaged in some scam. The men are horny and dangerous, the women cheap floozies — we don’t have to respect them, as they are Africans. We are also deathly afraid of them, physically and sexually. Brainwashed by movies and books we see a black on a street we are reflexively scared. Fear is a major element in spurring the contempt.
I had gone to South Africa to interview Nelson Mandela and the Indian community there has rightfully earned the wrath of the blacks. Their contempt for their darker brethren is pure bigotry. It is staggering to witness Indian prejudice slosh about in Africa, thick as soup. Even Mahatma Gandhi has been accused of showing disdain.
For years the Indians across the continent conned the locals and saw them as inferior. The classic case related is of a shopkeeper who would sell one shoe to the natives and then the second after a week thereby doubling the price. We call them habshis. We do, stop pretending we don’t.
My friend married an African American in Houston. Stunning sculptor in ebony and a scientist to boot. Brought her home as a surprise gift to his family. Look, Mom your daughter-in-law. Mom rolled into bed and clutched her chest. The neighbors fell over with laughter, Ah, such comeuppance. The couple left in two days and never came back again.
So it comes as no surprise that the police dithered about for two days and have only now arrested nine people almost reluctantly, seeing they themselves trotted off from the scene of the attack. Just a bit of fun, what? Let’s play strip a girl. No foul, no harm. Not as if she was raped.
The state government is pretending it is not such a big deal, mobs are mob and boys are boys. Union Minister for Law Sadananada Gowda is doing a two-step in shifty silence. The public doesn’t give a whistle in the wind — they are only Africans.
Parading a naked African in public for being in the wrong place in the wrong time our mean little minds because the equation is simple; aren’t they naked half the time anyway, what’s the big deal?
This is the mindset in a colored nation and it is abhorrent. Suffice it to say that the attention will now shift to Hyderabad where three students from Nigeria have alleged they are victims of a racist attack…they had to camp outside the police station all night to get their complaint registered. Don’t hold your breath.
It is for this reason that I refused to shake hands with film star Shahrukh Khan, not that he cared…for selling skin fairness cream. Any man who makes money from pigmentation and feels no moral guilt in equating worth with skin color doesn’t get my vote.
Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in the Column section are their own and do not reflect RiyadhVision’s point-of-view.
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