I was reading President Obama’s response to the Trayvon Martin murder, and couldn’t help wonder at how similar all the people in
the world are, once you cut through the jazz of lifestyle, region and developed
versus developing economies.
While reading the
articles (I hope there aren’t many who don’t know what I’m talking about, but
if you are one of them, I do hope you have clicked on the link by now) I was
reminded of this one instance where I was having a particularly tough day in
college, and poor mom called at the wrong time.
Well, Bengalis have a bit of racial snobbishness ingrained
in them, and I had just been exposed to new levels of inanity – a Gucci wearing
classmate who had just said something to the tune of Thomas Hardy being one of
the Hardy boys—I kid you not. And she
was my partner for an assignment which I obviously was doing all by myself, not
trusting her film evaluating capabilities after that statement.
Now the mother is a riddle.
She is your average middle-class Indian parent with middle-class values
that are constantly having head-on collisions with the urban, global platform
the kid brother and I find ourselves operating in.
And yet, from time to
time, she will say or do things that will totally overwhelm us with the
“modern” approach (“of course your daughter should get out of your house and
live by herself. She is 19. How else will she learn to be independent?”) and
make us thank our collective stars.
For those of you who are a little lost, it is not very
average for kids in middle-class India to be on their own. Hell, we have 40
year old men living with their parents. Some families resist the move on
excuses of safety, others do not even think of it as an option, especially if
it is a girl, and yet others don’t just accept the fact that there are things
in life that you never learn unless you are on your own, paying your own bills.
So while I went on a tirade on how I could lose my
culturally rich Bengali mind if I was exposed to such intellectual stimulus for
2 years, my mom stopped me, and said, “You have to learn to deal with everyone
and learn that beneath all the jazz, we are all the same. You are a Bengali and
you like your books and music, but she is from the class that makes the
money. Each people have their own skills
and that does not make anyone good or bad. She might drop dead if she finds out
about your great mathematical skills.”
Despite that reality check (yeah ok, I suck at math), I
still can’t wrap my head around Thomas Hardy being Fenton Hardy’s fictitious son. But the bit about ‘everyone being basically
the same” stuck on, and has helped me appreciate a lot of people in life.
What does this have to do with Martin? A lot, I think. I am not going to get into a
discourse on the unfairness or the unbelievable outrageousness of the entire
episode. That will take 100 pages. But to my non-American eyes, it did bring
out one basic problem in the American society that most of us are only too
happy to ignore, or overlook.
People in the “emerging world” celebrated with absolute gusto when
Obama was made the President. Office chatter revolved predominantly around how “only
in America can you break free of the slave trading history and have a Black
president”, college kids wore “yes you can” T shirts and bags, and people sang
praises of the great democracy.
No conflicts of opinion there— it is, in many ways, a great
country with great people.
But the image most Indians or South Asians have of this
country is kind of airbrushed.
And as the Martin murder shows, the problems here are
not only about distant issues of Ponzi schemers and rich, irate ex bankers.
We deal with our cross of caste and creed, and Americans deal with their baggage of apartheid.
And it is a dangerous baggage. Most people (needless to keep reminding everyone, most in this blog is most of those I met or
have interacted with) in the country that has a black President still largely
sees “blacks” as a group to be avoided when you are a minority in numbers,
categorizes fashion in terms of “this is very black, I am not sure I can wear
it”, and advises you not live in areas dominated by them. My through and
through American familiarization guide categorically told me this and this
block is more black and so unsafe and my rental agent told me she would not set
up viewings in those areas at all, even if there were good or cheap apartments.
Not that I had any particular liking for any of the off-limits places or that I
am challenging their judgment. These women have been doing it for more than 15
years and they know their job.
But that is pretty much like we treat Muslims in India, I thought.
Most of us have Muslim friends, respect the fact that there are many erudite
Muslims who are a blessing to the society, and know that there is no reason for
any educated and rational being to feel any bit threatened by them, and yet we
treat Muslims pretty much like how black men and women are here. Avoid in large
groups, steer clear of areas dominated by them especially after dark, discard
fashion that is associated with them, and go on in our fake erudite lives
without accepting that this is a problem.
Now I know from experience that there is some valid argument
to this. At least in India, it is true that many Muslim neighbourhoods tend to
have high crime rates, and from what I hear, such is the case here too. As a Muslim friend says, “it is true that all
of us are not terrorists, but it is also true that 99 percent of terrorists are
Muslims.” So ok, no smoke without fire,
agreed.
But India is a backward, developing nation that is still
struggling with basics like clean drinking water everywhere (which is not
available everywhere in the US either by the way), female infanticide and
general discrimination against girls (which I would love my American friends to
give my Indian friends a lesson in), and so on and so forth. So on that level,
I still grudgingly accept the fact that the large lot of Indians will have these
illogical biases. But how does this persist in one of the most developed nations
in the world? What is their excuse?
There need be none, because like my mother in her non
English speaking wisdom realized, basic human nature tends to stay the same
despite the differences of how and where you grow up. More so in its fallacies
and biases.
PS: did you know apartheid is still a huge problem in South Africa, as vouched for by my South African friend on a project here? "If I date a black guy no white guy will ever date me again." Her words, not mine. And judging from the fact that this is a 30-something working individual who has traveled quite a bit of the world, I would bet it is not a "certain section of the society" there that we are talking about. I mean if the urban, working crowd says this, it can't be any better in the really rural, orthodox parts of the country. So all in all, it is the story of the pot calling the kettle black.
Oh, pun was not intended. Maybe we should change that idiom and make it "dirty" or "sooty".
1 comment:
Well just a thought... Does not it fall under the theory of relativity? I mean we make ourselves believe we are better because someone is bad. Whatever I do is sensible. So all human beings are same is the truth as an ideology but is the biggest fallacy when it comes to mutual treatment and respect for one another.
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