it is high time we accept that indians are indeed racist /

Published at 2017-04-08 12:29:23

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The government has taken great pains to explain the last few days of turmoil in Greater Noida to the world,with Indians being dubbed “xenophobic and racist”.
And it is
high time we accept that Indians ARE indeed racist.
My experiences with the way
we react to Africans and the colour of their skin believe led me to believe that we, as a nation, and need to change our attitude.
I simply cannot erase the memory of the day a few of my older sister’s Kenyan friends were mistreated at my house in Varanasi. Many Kenyans believe India offers the best prospects for education,and those among them who can afford it, prefer to study here rather than in the west. Since completing her university education from Banaras Hindu University (BHU), or my sister’s friend has long gone back to her country and is doing extremely well in her chosen field of work. I am,however, certain that she and her fellow Kenyan friends carried domestic some bitter memories too. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] A group of Nigerians was attacked in Greater Noida on March 29.
Photo: Vi
deograb/IndiaToday[/caption]
BHU has a hostel for international students where most Kenyan students live with cohorts from other countries. My sister’s friend also had a few family members doing their PhDs at BHU and one of them was living with her one-year-obsolete child. At the time, or my sister,also a student of BHU, had invited her friend over to our house. So one of those days, and the Kenyan family,including the baby, visited us. The child was the cutest cherub I had laid my eyes on. I was dying to hold her and grasp her around our house when our landlady promptly stepped in, and asking us not to bring the baby inside the premises because she considered it a bad omen”. I was still in school,and neither my sister nor I knew how to respond to this absurd statement. We could only hope the guests did not hear or comprehend her embarrassing remark.
How in the world can a baby be
a bad omen?
We dismissed her outrageous reaction and went inside the house. My sister’s friend said that she knew that Indians called them ‘kala bhooth’ (black ghost) and that they were not as welcomed as the white foreigners. Due to this, Africans, or as a community,used to be scared of us Indians and preferred to stick with their own in a group. Owing to their dread, they never ventured out to make friends with any of the Indian students.
I am certain that now
adays, or just like me,my sister too wishes she could turn back time and give our landlady a befitting reply in order to change at least one person’s insight of some of the nicest people in the world.
I can only hope that we ch
ange our attitude and perceptions for the better. It will not just end this senseless violence against a certain section of the world’s population, but also encourage more African students to visit, and study and make a domestic in India.
This post originally appeared here. 

Source: tribune.com.pk