Being Black in India Can Be
Deadly
NEW DELHI,
India — Women traveling in India are often warned to be careful. But
there’s another persistent danger that fewer visitors are aware of: Racism.
On the night of Jan. 31, a
Tanzanian woman was reportedly beaten, stripped and paraded naked by a mob in
the southern city of Bengaluru after a road accident. The woman was not
involved, but the crowd assumed that she knew the driver responsible because he
too was black, from Sudan.
While police in India do not
keep a separate record of racially motivated crimes, incidents like this one
come into the limelight every year. Last March, two separate mob attacks were recorded against
African students in Bengaluru. In 2014, a huge crowd chased three African men
through a subway station in New Delhi. The murder of a Nigerian living in Goa led to protests and a
diplomatic standoff between the two countries in 2013.
Even aside from such attacks,
expats in India, especially those from African countries, have horror stories
to tell about the racism they face every day.
“The other day, someone spat
at me,”
said Hassan Mubarak, a Nigerian student who has lived in Greater Noida, a city
outside Delhi, for three years. “They
run away like I’m
a monkey, just because of the color of my skin? It saddens me deeply.”
Mubarak is one of thousands
of students from the African continent who move to India in the hope of a
better education. Technical courses at private universities in satellite cities
like Noida and Greater Noida attract hundreds of foreign students every year.
While students form the majority of African expats in India, the country is
also a popular destination for medical tourists because of its relatively cheap but high-quality
hospitals.
However, despite seeing
African expatriates, students and visitors in their midst for many years — centuries, in fact — many Indians are yet to
become comfortable with them. The alienation makes stereotypes and rumors
circulate quickly.
“Some are fine, but some
are very noisy, they wear obscene clothes,” said Sunil Kumar, a security
guard at a Greater Noida compound where many African students live. “One of
them broke a guard’s hand here,” he added. Further questioning revealed that
the guards had used sticks to beat the student after he had “deliberately” run
an auto-rickshaw over a guard’s foot.
“They just look scary
sometimes,”
said Pradeep Kumar, a pizza delivery man. He referred to Africans as “habshi,” a derogatory word used
for a community of African slaves brought in by the British during the colonial
period.
“I heard once that one of them
cut up and ate someone,”
Kumar said. He did not know if the story was true and had never faced any
trouble with African customers, but said he did not fear white visitors the
same way.
Words like the one Kumar used
and others denigrating the color of their skin are all too familiar to many
African students.
“I have never experienced it
myself because I am lighter and sometimes confused for Indian, but my friends
are abused in Hindi — people
spit, point and laugh at them,” said 20-year-old Horacio Mendes, a student from
Angola.
He has been in India for a
year, and thinks that white visitors face similar ridicule. “It’s directed at any outsiders,
but the Indians studying in the universities are better because they are
younger and their minds are more open.”
As outsiders, many feel that
they cannot claim the same rights Indians do, and that the police would not
take them seriously. Nigerian student Emmanuel Anuwe points to discrimination
among Indians themselves, like the racism faced frequently in Delhi by people from India’s
northeastern states,
who say that other Indians call them “chinki” — Chinese — and treat them as
second-class citizens.
“You can tell people think you
are dangerous or inferior by their body language, but it happens everywhere,” said Anuwe. “As an outsider I probably can’t complain, I just try to be
approachable to Indians.”
Outsiders have little reason
to hope that authorities will help. The Tanzanian woman attacked last month claims that a police officer
was present during her ordeal but failed to intervene. In the days after the
incident, police and state officials insisted that there was no racial motive to the violence.
In January 2014, a member of
the Delhi state assembly, Somnath Bharti — then serving as state law
minister — led his supporters in a raid on a south Delhi apartment housing several African women,
whom he accused of operating a drug and prostitution racket.
The group did not have a
warrant and no proof was found, while the women filed a complaint of
molestation —
yet many residents thanked Bharti for his service. He was subsequently
re-elected. Several Africans living in the area, meanwhile, said they
felt forced
to leave.
While Anuwe says that racism
is everywhere in the world, Mubarak finds it is worse in India. While he would
have fought similar slurs and intimidation back home in Nigeria, Mubarak says,
here he runs from confrontation.
“Even if they hit me, I won’t say anything because I am a
foreigner,”
he tells GlobalPost. “It’s not my country.”
Jaiswal, Nimsha. “Being
Black in India Can Be Deadly.” Feb 22, 2016. Global Post. Feb 23, 2016. From <http://www.globalpost.com/article/6736327/2016/02/22/india-racism>
Discrimination
by skin color is the main issue that is being discussed in this article. People
with darker skin are facing hardship wherever they go in the land of India.
African students that move to this country in hopes of achieving better levels
of education receive more hate and judgment than education due to their skin
color. I understand that it may be hard to be welcoming and open towards other
people living in your country, but actions can be justified only to a certain
degree, and not beyond that. Beating a woman and parading her through the
streets without any clothing because of the similarity in her skin color with
that of a man that just committed a crime is unacceptable, unreasonable, and
definitely not justifiable in any means. The author of this article assumes
that the audience will know about other dangers that are present in India other
than racial discrimination when they say that “women… are often warned to be
careful. But few visitors are aware of…” After reading this article, I am
definitely biased against the Indians living in India and towards the African
inhabitants there, because it made me pity those that are being racially
discriminated against. I think the Indian government should be sterner towards
what is happening in their country, and prevent further violence.
No comments:
Post a Comment