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DARE TO ASK: South Asians and matters of skin color

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

South Asia is very poor. Many South Asians are as dark as black people. So why are most Indians and other South Asians outside of Asia so arrogant, especially toward blacks?

Alison, 23, Afro-Caribbean, New York

Replies

My South Asian friends aren’t arrogant. Your problem might be your attitude, because you make a lot of generalizations about South Asians.

Michelle, 23, black, Fort Worth, Texas

This sort of racism exists in India, too, where men prefer lighter-skinned brides. Also, the media doesn’t portray a very positive picture of black people in America.

Amita, Asian, Mumbai, India

Alison: I have noticed the same thing. I think they act this way because white people tell foreigners when they come to the United States that it is OK to treat black people like trash.

Chris, black, Waldorf, Md.

White people do not tell South Asians to denigrate black people when they come to this country. What do you think, there are secret info sessions for Indians and Pakistanis when they immigrate where white people tell them what’s up?

Todd, Washington, D.C.

I’m from the sub-continent. In South Asia you would get discriminated against, most importantly on skin color. It goes back a few thousand years, when the Aryans entered India. They invented the caste system, which put them at the top and [darker-skinned] locals at the bottom. Almost everyone there has the same view: black should be kept away from white. Not all South Asians think like this, but generally they do.

Asian male, 21, Australia

Expert says

After weeks of interview requests were greeted with silence from Asian-Indian societies, professors and Indian political groups, we got the message: People aren’t dying to talk about this one.

Undeterred, we called New York attorney Nandini N. Ramnath, who’s done work for Human Rights Watch and last year took heat for a Beliefnet.com essay in which she rapped Indians and Hindus for prejudiced attitudes about skin color.

While most Indians born in America don’t harbor condescending “wink-wink, hush-hush” attitudes about darker skin, it’s not always the case for older Indians, many of whom arrived here with little and worked hard to succeed, said Ramnath, who is second-generation.

“There’s a real lack of understanding. … As much as it was difficult to find a job and get settled, they still didn’t have a legacy of racial discrimination here that hindered their performance in the way it can hinder African-Americans.”

One need only look to popular skin-lightening creams in South Asia such as Unilever’s “Fair & Lovely” to see how entrenched views in the homeland are about the allure of paler skin, Ramnath added.

“Even my mother told me ‘Don’t go in the sun, you’ll get dark and won’t be attractive.’ I said ‘Mom, I’m going to the beach and there’s nothing you can say about it.'”

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