HomeTrendingMalavika Mohanan's powerful note on racism in India

Malavika Mohanan’s powerful note on racism in India

The death of African American – George Floyd has led to massive protests across the US states. With netizens trending the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter and even celebrities back home from Bollywood and Tollywood lent their support by calling out racism. Amidst this actress Malavika Mohanan has penned a powerful and thought-provoking note stating how racism and colourism exits in India too.

Malavika Mohanan racisim 1

Sharing an Instagram post, she wrote her personal anecdote how she first faced racism comment during her teens. Her post reads,”When I was 14 yrs old, one of my closest friends at that point told me that his mother never let him drink tea because she had this weird belief that drinking tea darkened ones’ skin complexion, and when he asked for tea once she told him(referring to me) “If you drink tea, you will become dark like her”. He was a fair maharashtrian boy and I was a wheat-ish skinned malayalee girl. The complexion dissimilarity we had had never even occurred to me up until that point. This left me perplexed because it was the first time somebody had made a comment like that with a mean undertone about my skin colour. So much casual racism and colourism exists in our own society (sic).”

She further pointed out that how people passout mean comments against South and East Indians, “Calling a dark skinned person ‘kala’ is something we see on an everyday basis. The discriminatory behaviour against south-Indians and North-East Indians is also appalling. Dark skinned Indians are jokingly referred to as ‘madrasis’ because for some strange reason these ignorant people think all South Indians are only dark skinned. North-East Indians are almost exclusively only called ‘chinki’, all black people are casually referred to as ‘negros’ and fair people are equated as beautiful and dark skinned people are equated as ugly. While we speak about global racism, we must also become aware about what’s happening around us, in our homes, our friend circles and our society, and do our part in thwarting the obvious as well as the subtle racism and colourism that exists all around us, in our everyday lives. What makes you beautiful is being a good and kind person, and not the colour of your skin (sic).”

Recent Articles English

Gallery

Recent Articles Telugu