Fifty shades of beauty

Published On: October 22, 2016 12:35 AM NPT By: Aleena Udas Sharma


Preference for lighter skin is not restricted to women anymore. Men are also smitten by this fairness bug
It was 6:30 am and as usual we were late. I thought my son would miss his school bus.
Thankfully we reached the bus stop well within time. Everything seemed normal at the stop except for an unfamiliar face. There was a pretty little girl. She stood close to her mom and was happily reciting a nursery rhyme: 
“Chubby cheeks, dimpled chin, Rosy lips, teeth within, Curly hair, very fair, Eyes so blue, lovely too, Teacher’s pet, is that you? “Yes, yes, yes.” 

I enjoyed listening to her voice, even applauded her expressions, yet there was something which made me uncomfortable listening to it. The physical characteristics of a beautiful girl described in the rhyme hardly matched the little girl apart from her curly hair and chubby cheeks. I thought to myself why schools make children learn such rhymes when majority of the children are neither fair nor do they have blue eyes. I also wondered why we, at such an early age, teach children that rosy lips, curly hair and fairness are synonymous with being beautiful and will make them their teacher’s favorite. 

We are consciously or subconsciously telling our children that skin color is what determines success, fame and happiness. Colorism, as defined by Radhika Parameswaran, a professor at the Media School of Indiana University, is a discrimination against people based on skin color. It’s a discrimination in which dark skinned people are seen as inferior, less beautiful, less competent, less intelligent and less accomplished than the light skinned people. 

Begins at home 
Although colorism is common in most countries, it is practiced extensively in the South Asian region. It is so deep-rooted in this part of the world that sometimes it begins as soon as a woman conceives. Peers offer their outrageous advice to an expecting mother to start having white color food like milk, blanched almonds and coconut instead of tea and coffee, if she wants to have a light-complexioned child. 

After the child birth, the first thing parents and relatives notice after a close scrutiny of a child’s limbs is the skin color. Other bizarre recommendations follow such as to bathe a child with milk so that the child’s complexion becomes lighter. 

We code people as white, brown and black based on their skin color. Thanks to our cultural belief that links fairness to beauty, which is a prerequisite for marriage. Most matrimonial advertisements in national dailies read something like: ‘looking for a fair, slim and homely girl for….’. This not only accentuates the potential bride’s fairness more than her education and professional status but also emphasize how ingrained colorism is in our mindset. 

Color mania 
Preference for lighter skin is not restricted to women anymore. Men are also smitten by this fairness bug, and gone are those days of tall-dark-handsome men. In India, some products even promise love, wealth, fame and happiness for fairer men. Brands such as Fair & Handsome, Garnier Men’s face wash and Vaseline Men are nothing but brands cashing in on our notorious obsession for a white skin. Fair and Lovely has been the most sought after brand for fairness cream for decades and I still remember my childhood days when my cousins refused to step out of the house without dabbing a generous portion of it on their faces. 

Things haven’t changed over the years. Rather we have got more choices in terms of brands manufacturing fairness products with atrocious promises. In countries like India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, where many people are brown, the media is flooded with numerous advertisements which promulgate the message that fair is bold and fairness is beautiful. This trend is dangerous because we are indirectly telling everyone around us that ‘if you are brown/black’ you should use these fairness products and unravel a new ‘you’ who is considered more acceptable by the society. This reinforces stereotypes which further create social inequalities. 

Having a different skin tone is neither an evil spell, nor a disease; it is just a skin which has got more melanin in it. It is shameful, the way we, as a society, look at people with a dark skin tone. Ironically, we call ourselves modern and educated when we still behave, react and think like our predecessors of the medieval era. We still associate fair skin with superiority, beauty and power, hence we tell our daughters to stay indoors and avoid the sun fearing it might darken their complexion. We still use our hand as shields inside our vehicles to protect our kids from getting tanned. We still narrate those bedtime stories of fairies and gift them dolls with curly hair, fair skin and blue eyes. 

Time for change 
Colorism is everywhere, all over the world, cutting across religions, castes and creeds. From working class to the world leaders, people have been frequently differentiated based on their complexion. Differentiation is not a negative process per se. We differentiate between intelligence and stupidity, privilege and depravity, youth and aged, etc. But differentiating light with dark skin tone is being ignorant and detrimental to our growth as a human race. 

We need to change our attitudes and prejudices against a skin tone which is just a few shades darker. This calls for a collaborative effort by parents, teachers, families, friends and the society as a whole, so as to promote beauty in all its shades and not one over the other shade. Beauty is skin deep and there is more to life than skin’s color. So let’s not forget ‘laundry is the only thing that should be separated by color’ and black and white can have equally beautiful fifty shades. 

The writer is a freelancer based in New Delhi 


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