Monday, January 7, 2008

Harbhajan guilty of racial abuse – Ignorance raises the temperature

1. Did Harbhajan call, Andrew Symonds a ‘monkey’ at Sydney?
2. Did Harbhajan call Andrew Symonds a ‘monkey’ at Mumbai and thereafter apologize?
3. Was it clarified to the Indian team the word ‘monkey’ would be considered a racial abuse?
4. Is Harbhajan guilty of racist abuse?
5. Is the punishment meted out to Harbhajan justified?

Too many questions and as many passionate answers on the web. But are there enough voices of sanity? Questions 1, 2 and 3 are questions of fact and there cannot be a debate about them. Now if I take the Ricky Ponting’s version on these facts, then Harbhajan is guilty of ‘using a phrase the second time after he was told that the specific phrase is offensive in nature, moreso when directed at Andrew Symonds’. This is boorish behaviour and has no place on the field of cricket. Hence, IF the facts mentioned by Ricky Ponting are right, then the punishment is justified.

Boorish behavior on cricket field by likes of Harbhajan and Sreesanth, and Andre Nel, and many in this Australian team should not be tolerated and it should be dealt with strongly and on that ground Harbhajan has no defense. Slater should have been banned for his altercation with Dravid and so should Mcgrath for taking matters too far with Sarwan. ‘Sledging is part of cricket’ is non-sense which if a necessary trait would have made Kapil Dev and Sachin Tendulkar and Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh and Adam Gilchrist refreshment peddlers in the stands rather than stalwarts on the ground.Yes, it is important to have characters on the ground as it is important to have them in the society, but we dont tolerate miscreants in the society for this reason, do we?

Now that we have set aside the issue of Harbhajan’s behaviour and the punishment, we can focus on (4), which in my view is far more complex. I believe there is substance in the argument that Indians do not understand racism or its symbols as it is appreciated in the west. Not until I started following European football and all the related issues and gossip, did I know about ‘monkey chants’ and their racial connotation. My wife has traveled all over the world, and has lived in Europe, and till last evening she did not know that calling someone a ‘monkey’ would be considered a racial abuse – in India we have a ‘Monkey God’ who is worshipped everywhere and many temples are havens for monkeys who are lovingly fed by devotees! You can jump to call her ignorant, but so would I term more than half a trillion people in the world who wouldn’t know that calling someone ‘Chamaar’ is casteist which can land you in jail in India under a non-bailable offence. India hasn’t been witness to ‘racism’ as the west hasn’t known ‘casteism’. Indian has not been associated with or witness to (a) Slavery, other than Indians themselves having been taken to Caribbean, Malaysia, Phiji etc. as farm labourers (b) Holocaust or (c) immigrant population taking over land and resources from aborginines, as we are the aborigines of our land1. Call us ignorant again, but no Indian would understand the stigma or (in some countries) legal implications of being a ‘holocaust denier’. Since these are three ethnic groups which form the target of most race related issues in the west (and forgive me for clubbing Australia with the west), most Indians lack an appreciation of what comprises racism in the western context. I did a dipstick among half a dozen Indians with post-graduate degree, but those who haven’t traveled abroad – not one knew that calling an African American a ‘Negro’ is racist. You call them ignorant, and I will again give you the ‘Chamaar’ example. Why talk about common man, when even Aussie media has shown complete ignorance of the subject? Andrew Stevensen in Sydeny Morning Herald has written an article about caste as a factor in Indian team composition – while his hypotheses and postulations can be debated – he has got his facts completely wrong. He calls RP Singh a Brahmin (upper caste) while he is Kshatriya, and says Dhoni is from a lower caste while the fact is that Dhoni is from the same caste as RP Singh. – though Dhoni lives in Jharkhand, he comes from Uttarakhand which has amongst the highest percentage of ‘upper class’ population in the country. There more factual errors, which provide enough proof that Mr. Stevensen wouldn’t even know who could be the target of a casteist jibe which could land you in the jail! This ignorance is not only limited to caste (which many Indian commentators with urban backgrounds don’t understand any better) but even regions. David Sygall in the same newspaper quotes an Indian journalist to explain how Harbhajan’s attitude is linked to his being from north without realizing that the enfant terrible in Indian cricket for last eighteen months is Sreesant, a south Indian. So much for complete lack of understanding even amongst journalists, so why act so incredulous when it is mentioned that Indians do not understand racism as Australians do.

Most bloggers have linked the Harbhajan issue to crowd behavior in Mumbai where members of the public were caught on camera making ‘monkey gestures’. I believe that Indian crowd behaviour at many ODIs is appaling that is because most of them are there for a false sense of patriotism rather than any appreciation of cricket. These are people who wouldn’t be at a cricket match if India was not playing and would not be at a match if it wasn’t a Twenty20 or an ODI. SCG had 30,000 in attendance even on week days, and most Indian grounds don’t manage even half that number during test matches which to my mind is benchmark of cricket appreciation. Such hooligans in involved in Mumbai incident should be punished severely, as they are no 'cricket lovers' – they are ‘cricket dumb’ who don’t know the difference between a googly and Chinaman; make Yuvraj and Dhoni bigger cricketers than VVS Laxman – just idiots but no racists. Ask any West Indian team that has visited India? If none of them have faced racist abuse then Andrew Symonds and Australian team need to introspect before making such accusations. Some Aussies say that since they dominate world cricket, hence this different attitude towards them – but so did West Indies during 70s and 80s and they were almost all men of colour (maybe with the exception of Lary Gomes), but did not face such crowd behavior.

1 All Dravidians are certainly the original inhabitants of this land, and many historians argue that even Aryans are.

14 comments:

Unknown said...

Well you are doubtless correct on the influence of cultural differences but logically if the answers to 1,2,3 are positive then the answer to 4 must surely be yes.

After the furore of the ODI series Harbhajan could not have been unaware of the perjorative racial implications of the term whether or not he understands them in the way that Symonds himself does.

Mind you I'd be as happy for a ban on Ponting for his boorish behaviour after the last wicket well. He was too concerned with triumphal gestures to the crowd to commiserate with his opposite number after a magnificent rearguard. A stark contrast to Flintoff's behaviour at the conclusion of the Edgbaston test in 2005.

ahil said...

hi,

great post. as an Australian seeing this from an international context it's very difficult to understand why so many people (here in Australia and in India) are trying to defend the use of the term 'monkey' towards the lone coloured Australian cricketer, though i guess this is culturally relative. that said, it was made pretty clear after the series in India that the term was off-limits so it's a shame someone as sharp-tongued as Harbhajan couldn't come up with something more appropriate.

lux

Siddhu said...

(4) derives from 1,2 &3 but not the gravity of the crime. 'F*** off' or 'Bastard' translated into Hindi would lead to a murder in the part of India that I come from - all of us know its abusive but the gravity of the abuse is construed differently.

I am not really sure, if the ban would have made a practical difference though - come to think of it, India may have played an extra pacer in Perth and they couldnt have dropped Kumble, so there was only one person to go! Though some may say that drop Yuvraj and bring Pathan in.

Unknown said...

I take your point that it is dangerous to use blanket terms like "racial abuse" without some qualification. The term tends to elicit strong reactions not always proportional to the context it applies to.

Some sort of ban does seems applicable though (if truly guilty that is) because Harbhajan must of been aware that it was racially offensive to Symonds. For example now that I am aware that 'bastard' is taken so seriously in your home region I could not expect much sympathy were I assualted after I used it during a visit - irrespective of the fact that I don't find the word offensive myself.

Actually I'd think Harbhajan might have enjoyed Perth - it is more spinner friendly than in days gone by. That said without Zaheer it would be prudent to play Pathan anyway.

I don't know about Youvraj. I've seen him play some wonderful one-day knocks but clearly he has yet to feel comfortable in Test cricket. Is he up to it? Reminds of all the chat about a chap called Symonds just over a year ago.

Phil said...

Um, the premise of your blog is that we accept Ponting's word! Has this actually been accepted? Do we take it as a fact that HS did infact use those comments towards Symmonds. If so then he does deserve the ban whether he knew the seriousness of the affront or not! Why? If you came to my country and called someone a 'son of a b*^&(h', you would be beaten within an inch of your life if the person could do so. Reason being that parental slurs (especially maternal ones) do not go down so well in a country where respect for your elders is held (somewhat hypocritically i might add) to the highest standards. No one would excuse your been a foreigner either. Its simple, don't dish out slurs, whether during sledging, or as a response to provocation unless you're quite sure it will not lead to escalation or hyperreaction. As your article posits, 'innocent slurs' in one country are blood feuds in another. Take the recent case of the teacher naming a doll 'Mohammed'. Meaningless in most parts of the world but apparently a capital offense in Sudan. You've got to mind your language

Siddhu said...

Philip, now after seeing this I may have to do a rethink on taking Ponting's word..

http://www.rediff.com/cricket/2008/jan/07prem.htm

..though I think India's defense has been more about 'not heard' rather than 'not said' and hence I premised on Ponting's submission

SACHIN THE GREAT said...

Interesting points.

I think that Harbhajan is guilty of being clumsy with his words, and he is definitely not a racist but quick tempered.

Unfortunately, with the ICC mandate to stamp out racist comments in the crowd and on the field, he will be the scapegoat that all others is judged upon.

I am not sure about the statement that Indians do not know about racism. What about the Indian feelings in regards to Pakistan. Many of my indian friends have no respect of Pakistanis and will use crass terms to describe that culture/race... This door is defintely ajar for me.

And on the shaking of the hands, it happened only 30 seconds later. What's the big deal. They are grown up. The gentlemans game went away in the 70's when it go professional. It is just nice to see sometime it is still there.

Also, Anil Kumble was far from Humble in his comments about the spirit of the game. Poor timing and it sounds like sour grapes.

virtualciti said...

Well check out what the monkey comment means actually:

http://www.onedayers.com/cricket/odi/articles/2008/01/08/andrew-symonds-monkey-controversy-racial.html

Not knowing whether Harbhajan said the M-Word, but is the B-Word (by the B Hogg to opposing captain Anil Kumble) below rank below the M-Word? It somehow if true can at maximum be a case of abuse equivalent to calling Inzamam an "Aloo" (potato) or calling Harbhajan a "Turbanator" (turban is a religious symbol in India). If you check the pictures in my blog link above you'll understand where the comment emanates from and it is certainly not racial...

And we still do not know whether it is true..

Siddhu said...

Virtualciti, I am not sure if you appreciate the background to this and the background to this in US,Europe and the west, but such pictorial comparisons justify the Australian stance. Only defense that harbhajan has that he did not say it. Nothing beyond that exonerates him - cultural difference issue helped him get away the last time. The pictorial comparison given by you would be considered vulgar and strongly racist considering that Andrew Symonds is partly of West indian ethinicity and most racism has been about comparing such people features (or intelligence) with monkeys which sickening and hence strong measures to curb this.

virtualciti said...

I have never said that Harbhajan is guilty of saying the M-Word. I am only showing the 3 pictures to compare Andrew Symonds with pictures of our Gods. If that is racial, then i be damned.

Siddhu said...

Problem here is that it is a 'Monkey God' thus suggestions on similar looks are controversial. Maybe, it may not have been racist if a person is called 'Hanuman' (which incidetnly is name of many people in India:-)), but resemblance to a monkey, what if its a monkey God is a serious issue. As an Indian, I also feel it shouldnt be but living in UK and now on the continent I know how people react

Anonymous said...

After winning the match against Mumbai Indians, Kings XI Punjab’s fast bowler Shanthakumaran Sreesanth was seen crying at the ground. First it looked as if they were tears of joy as KXP registered there first win. But then, things took a serious turn. Sreesanth once started crying, never stopped crying at the ground. Reports came in later, confirming that those were not the tears of joy. The reports confirmed that Harbhajan Singh Slapped Sreesanth.

Harbhajan and Sreesanth both are known to be aggressive on the field. We haven’t forgotten whatever happened in Australia against Matthew Hayden and Andrew Symonds. But this time it happened after the match was over and between the two team mates of Team India. Both of them are playing for different teams in IPL though.

The big question is, why did Harbhajan slap Sreesanth? What made Harbhajan go out of controls?


Now the both are Indians,as per your blog, Harbhajan guilty of racial abuse, What is your comments.

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