In Nepal, I
did not experience many people staring at me or seriously haggling me very
often. My skin is dark enough that many times I can pass for Nepali, or
Punjabi, or Bengali depending who you ask. But since arriving in India two days
ago it seems impossible to go for more than 10 seconds without someone not only
staring, but rushing to get my photo.
At the Red
Fort in Agra, lots of people cared more about posing to catch the two
foreigners in the background than the Taj Mahal. A family – mother, father, and
toddler – kindly approached and asked us for a photo. Not for one of us to take
their photo in front of the world’s most beautiful building…the dad wanted a
photo of myself, Sydney, and the baby. He even started to hand us the kid at
one point.
I don’t know
you and you don’t know me thus it is unnecessary, and weird, for you to thrust
your child at me for a picture. If I was the pope, holding babies so their
parents could click one photo would be part of my job. I am not the pope…so
keep your kids to yourself.
And it’s not
like this was one family. The “can I take a picture of you and my kid?”
scenario has played out at least three times in the last 72 hours and I fully
expect it to continue throughout our journey.
Some people
prefer not to ask. Perhaps they recognize that it is inappropriate, awkward,
uncomfortable, and borderline racist. Instead, they just strike a pose in such
a way that Sydney and I are in the background or the foreground or any other
ground that will let them memorialize these two pale skinned strangers trying
to enjoy a historical site. Particularly interested groups take turns being the
photographer or try multiple poses in search of the best effect.
|
This photo was used in our hotel's sightseeing guide. It inspired today's blog title. |
I am more
than my skin color – in America, in Cameroon, in Nepal, and even in India – I
am a whole person. I’m not even that white. (I occasionally wonder how
our experiences would be different if Sydney and I were traveling separately.)
My whiteness is nothing in the shadow of the Taj Mahal so take a picture in
front of that, not me.
The whole
experience has raised some questions for me:
1) What am I doing
to contribute to the idolization of white people and white culture?
2) What am I doing
to make other people feel uncomfortable when they visit my country?
3) What am I doing
to help dismantle a culture where thin and white are the definition of beauty?
While I
cannot comment on the quality of all the unauthorized photos of me, I can show
you what I chose to remember about my brief stops in Delhi and Agra.
|
Humayun's Tomb in Delhi. |
|
Beautiful stone lattice windows were everywhere. |
|
The Taj Mahal, seen from the Red Fort. |
|
A step well at the Mehrauli Archaeological gardens in Delhi. |
|
Me and Sydney enjoying sunrise at the Taj.
Please note that there are literally no other people in this photograph. |
|
The classic reflection picture. |
|
A beautiful gate at Fatepur Sikri, sight of the most organized scam I've ever witnessed. |
This is a very good read, Rachel. You were always 5 steps ahead of the rest of us in school, and it's obvious you have an intelligent perspective of the world around you. I applaud you for thinking of these kind of issues and appreciating the culture, instead of where's the plane? or What did Miley do now?
ReplyDeleteoh my sweet daughter thank you for your thoughts. Honey my whole life has been spent trying to get people to look beyond the color of ones skin. Each of us, as a child of God, has such value and we should always be looking at others and ourselves to ask what that special gift, talent or purpose is the Lord calls us to use. Love the questions you are asking...looking forward to long walks to process some of them.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Mom
Rach, just stumbled upon this reflection you wrote- I appreciate the thoughtfulness of the questions you raised! It's something I'm still grappling with even (and especially!) after being home the past couple of months and inevitably comes up in the things I choose to share with friends and family. Thanks for sharing :)
ReplyDelete