By RASNA WARAH
via nation
Except when I was a young girl, when “mhindi” was a word derogatively used against me, I have never felt that my race or religion were the most important things about me.
via nation
Except when I was a young girl, when “mhindi” was a word derogatively used against me, I have never felt that my race or religion were the most important things about me.
On the
contrary, I have tried to live my life outside race and religion because
I have seen that these rather superficial markers of identity have
divided the world and robbed people of their humanity.
Race
and religion are used to cover up all kinds of sins and lay claim on
resources. For instance, in Iraq, the Islamic State is reported to be
using the Quran to justify the sexual slavery of women and girls, just
as Europeans used the Bible to explain apartheid and the trans-Atlantic
slave trade.
However, the terminology used to describe
these crimes varies depending on who is committing them. When Muslim
extremists kill Christians, they call themselves jihadists but are
castigated by non-Muslims as terrorists. When a white man killed nine
black people in a church in Charleston, South Carolina, recently, he was
called a racist, not a terrorist.
On the Indian
sub-continent, the border between India and Pakistan is like the Great
Wall of China – people who share the same culture, traditions and
language have been separated because of the myopic ambitions and phobias
of pre-independence politicians.
So you have the
bizarre situation where there are more Muslims in India than in Pakistan
but citizens of either country cannot freely cross each other’s
borders.
FESTERING WOUND
In
the United States, blackness is a health hazard. Blacks are arbitrarily
arrested by the police more than any other race. The killing of black
people for minor misdemeanours by white police officers has almost
become an epidemic. Ironically, the crisis of racism appears to have
escalated under a black president.
The United States’
history of slavery has been an old festering wound that refuses to heal.
Black people remind white Americans about the country’s brutal,
genocidal past.
Some white Americans hope to erase this
memory through the physical erasure of blacks from their midst.
Ironically, some white people in America are so keen to adopt black
identities that they have changed their looks to appear black, as did
Rachel Dolezal, who not only denied her white parentage, but went on to
get elected as the president of the Washington chapter of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
What
could have prompted a white woman to adopt a black identity in a
country where blackness does not offer many advantages? Critics of
Dolezal, who was recently “outed” by none other than her parents, say
that she is an opportunist who took on a black identity without
suffering the hardships that most blacks in America experience.
This
type of confused self-identification combined with religious and ethnic
bigotry are making this world an intolerant, unforgiving
conflict-ridden place.
'FAILURE OF IMAGINATION'
The
last two years have been the most traumatic in terms of forced
population movement largely due to conflicts in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan
and Ukraine. According to UNHCR, by the end of 2014, almost 60 million
people had been displaced from their homes, the highest level of
displacement witnessed since World War II.
In a world
that is so digitally connected, it is ironic that human beings are
becoming more disconnected, polarised and inward-looking.
One
of President Barack Obama’s most memorable messages in the speech he
delivered to the Kenyan people was that “a politics based solely on
tribe and ethnicity is a politics that is doomed to tear a country
apart”.
He called this type of politics “a failure of
imagination” because it uses a denominator that one has little control
over – ethnicity – to mobilise people and gain votes, just as religious
extremists, be they Christians, Muslims, Hindus or Jews, use religion to
divide people.
Obama’s message that we should remain human above all else couldn’t have come at a better time.
Unfortunately,
the US president failed to acknowledge the role the American government
has played in spawning conflict and breeding terrorism in places such
as Libya, Iraq, Syria, Egypt and Pakistan.
The media
too missed an opportunity to ask him why US military aid and
interventions have always led to more, not less, conflict around the
world.
rasna.warah@gmail.com
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