Ramachandra Guha -The racist in the mirror
Earlier this week,
senior African diplomats issued a joint statement deploring the spate of recent
attacks on African students and citizens in India. Although these attacks had
occurred at regular intervals over the years, these diplomats noted that,
worryingly, “no known, sufficient and visible deterring measures” had been
taken by the Government of India. Further, the envoys “unanimously agreed that
those accumulated attacks against Africans” were “xenophobic and racial in
nature”.
The African envoys
said that they expected “strong condemnation from the highest political level
(both nationally and locally) of the Government of India”, as well as “legal
actions against the perpetrators”. If these remedial actions were not
forthcoming, the African Heads of Missions were considering asking for “an
independent investigation by the Human Rights Council as well as other human
rights bodies, and also to comprehensively report the matter to the African
Union Commission.”
The wording was
unusually strong for a diplomatic statement, as witness the use of the words
“xenophobic and racial”. The strictures were merited. While xenophobia in India
has been on the rise in recent years, racism has deep historical roots.
Consciousness of skin colour, the marked preference for those of lighter
complexion, has long been pervasive in, and endemic to, Indian society. Growing
up in Uttar Pradesh, I was often asked why “Madrasis” were so dark; returning
south for holidays, I found my aunts and uncles, when searching for brides for
their sons, specifying that these must be “paalmadri” (literally, the colour of
milk, whiteness itself).
Everyday racism within
Indian society is reflected in such matters as matrimonial advertisements
asking for (or demanding) women with fair skin. And it is reflected outwards in
prejudice against Africans. Indeed, when he landed in Africa in May 1893, aged
24, Mohandas Gandhi was himself a racist. He saw Africans as backward and lazy,
and as greatly inferior to Indians, and wrote about them in these terms. These
prejudices he shed, slowly, the longer he lived in the land. In a speech in
Johannesburg in 1908 he insisted that the British rulers should give both
Indians and Africans “equality with themselves. free institutions and make them
absolutely free men”.
After his return to
India in 1915, Gandhi’s views evolved further. In his book Satyagraha in South
Africa, written in 1924-5, Gandhi argued that Africans had “a perfect grasp of
the distinction between truth and falsehood”, adding that “it is doubtful
whether Europeans or ourselves practise truthfulness to the same extent” as
Africans did. Through the 1930s and 1940s, many African and African-American
activists came to consult with him in his ashram in Sevagram, with Gandhi
insisting to them (and to his fellow Indians) that “the slogan today is no
longer ‘Asia for the Asiatics’ or ‘Africa for the Africans’ but the unity of
all the exploited races of the earth.” In 1946, Gandhi spoke of the common
thread that bound all “the exploited coloured races of the earth, whether they
are brown, yellow or black.”
The greatest of modern
Africans, Nelson
Mandela, liked to tell visiting Indians: “You gave us a lawyer; we gave you
back a Mahatma”. In so generously overlooking Gandhi’s early racism, Mandela
was no doubt mindful of the substantial assistance that India and Indians had
afforded the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa. At a time when Western
democracies were propping up the racist regime in Pretoria, the Government of
India gave the African National Congress both moral and material help. In fact,
in canvassing global support for their struggle, Mandela’s great mate, Oliver
Tambo, was facilitated by the provision to him of an Indian passport by Jawaharlal Nehru’s
government.
Indian patriots and
anti-racists were a source of inspiration for freedom fighters in many other
parts of Africa as well. The lawyer-scholar, Anil Nauriya, has documented how
anti-colonial movements in Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, Botswana and other
countries were directly influenced by the Indian example.
The recent attacks on
Africans in India run counter to this political legacy of support and
solidarity. But they are tragically consistent with a deeper history of racism,
whereby ordinary Indians are brought up to regard those of dark or darker skin
as somehow inferior to themselves. This societal racism has been intensified by
a politically induced xenophobia, which stokes a suspicion, and even hatred, of
those whose culture, faith, ways of life, and (not least) skin colour is
different from ours. There is a familial resemblance between the demonisation
of Muslims and Christians across the country, the harassment of students from
the Northeast in Bengaluru and Pune, and the attacks on Africans in Greater
Noida.
Indian attitudes to
racism and xenophobia are also marked by a notable hypocrisy. Middle class
Indians complain loudly when Europeans and Americans do not give them the
respect and honour they think they deserve. They feel insulted when their food,
culture and form of dress is insufficiently appreciated overseas. Yet these
same Indians act in a contemptible manner towards Africans, making racist
remarks about their food, culture, and form of dress (and, of course, skin
colour too).
The leading scholar of
modern nationalism, Benedict Anderson, once remarked that all true nationalists
must feel a sense of shame at crimes committed by the country to which they owe
allegiance. Anderson was himself Irish by birth, American by domicile, and
Indonesian by cultural affiliation, and he was equally unsparing of the crimes
committed in the name of Irish, American, or Indonesian nationalism. The recent
attacks against Africans, and the failure to prevent and even to properly
condemn them, shame both the people and the Government of India. The strong and
entirely justified rebuke from the African Heads of Mission in New Delhi is a
wake-up call to all Indians, the aam aadmi in the street or the khas aadmi in
his ministerial bungalow.
http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/the-racist-in-the-mirror-4599774/