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Tuesday, June 9, 2020

[mukto-mona] Tiananmen Massacre China Should Apologise



Tiananmen Massacre China Should Apologise
Saleem Samad
Quietly the infamous day passed off without any large vigil to mark the 31st Tiananmen Square massacre on 4 June.
Hong Kong is the only territory of mainland China where a candlelit vigil, mass commemorations are held for the event since 1990. The event attracted tens of thousands of participants and visitors from all over the world.
Hong Kong police have banned the annual vigil marking the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre for the first time in 30 years, citing coronavirus pandemic restrictions.
The candlelight vigil was in memory of tens of thousands pro-democracy movement were brutally suppressed on 4 June 1989 at ancient Qing dynasty Tiananmen Square built-in 1651, ending months of unarmed student-led demonstrations in China.
The governing Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has never acknowledged the massacre.
About 180,000 troops and armed police marched into Tiananmen Square and crushed a student protest calling for democratic reform following the death of a progressive leader in CCP, who had been deposed by Chairman Deng Xiaoping.
Well, no death toll has ever been officially released, but rights groups and Chinese in exile estimate hundreds, if not thousands were killed when China's elite People's Liberation Army was deployed to crack down on unarmed protesters in Beijing.
Surely there was global outcry and media made screaming headlines around the world, with iconic images such as the "Tank Man" bravely defying the troops on the square.
China's hardliners exploited that event to oust reformers who had been sympathetic to the demonstrators. The hawks have rewritten history and demonizing political opposition and dissidents.
Tiananmen Square has brought the hardliner bigwigs of CCP into drawing board to rethink the state policy and implemented methods of repression and strict state control, according to Zhang Lifan, who was a scholar at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in 1989.
Post Tiananmen, many of China's reformers (including the head of the Communist Party himself) were condemned to lifelong house arrest, while some dissidents fled to the West in collaboration with a network of exiled Chinese in Paris who advocates on how to bring democracy to China.
China's state authority censorship increased manifold with a particular emphasis on purging the protest from Chinese news and history books. Within a year of the massacre, the Chinese government "had closed 12 percent of all newspapers, 13 percent of social science periodicals and 76 percent of China's 534 publishing companies," according to Minxin Pei's From Reform to Revolution.
China's hawks were initially perturbed by the Tiananmen pro-democracy struggle and further frightened by the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991. America's victory in the Cold War and the outright dissolution of the USSR shook Beijing hardliners.
The Tiananmen syndrome has impacted proactively upon open-door policy in trade, commerce, and investment. The economic policy has catapulted China to become an Asian giant and gradually came at par of Western countries.
Amid anti-American conspiracy theories, which portrayed the devious United States continually undermine the Chinese people. The purge of pro-American reformers in China left few reform advocates in positions of power, rest were toppled and send into exile.
The hawks also adopted "hyper nationalists" concepts and soon became official Party doctrine in the Patriotic Education Law in 1994, which China later tried to impose on Hong Kong.
Behind the curtain, the reformers in China keeping their heads low, silently watching the Hong Kong's pro-reform protests and of course giving up hopes of Chinese apology to the families and survivors for the massacre and another ten of thousands thrown into dark dungeons in punishment to dare challenge the CCP hawks.

First published in The New Nation, 9 June 2020

Saleem Samad, is an independent journalist, media rights defender, recipient of Ashoka Fellowship and Hellman-Hammett Award. He could be reached at saleemsamad@hotmail.com; Twitter @saleemsamad





#StaySafeStayHome
><((((o>><((((o><o))))><><((((o>
SALEEM Samad
Recipient of Ashoka Fellow (1991) & Hellman-Hammett Award (2005)
Freelance Journalist & Columnist
Correspondent, Reporters Without Border (RSF)
+8801711-530207 phone

+1-718-713-4364 ePhone
+1-863-774-1849 eFax

Email: saleemsamad@hotmail.com

Twitter: @saleemsamad

Skype: saleemsamad

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/saleem.samad

Blog: http://bangladeshwatchdog.blogspot.com/

P Save a tree, think before you print this e-mail


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Posted by: Saleem Samad <saleemsamad@hotmail.com>


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"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190





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Re: [mukto-mona] DT Opinion: Of Racism and Whitening Cream Culture



Quote-
The day when the demand for skin whitening cream 
sale plummets, only then can a nation be redefined 
to be non-racist.
Unquote

Sorry, totally disagree.  First thing, it assumes only
"white" means racist and "black" means non-racist.
These stereotype assumptions do not withstand even
a moment's scrutiny.  Blacks and Browns are more
colour conscious and hate others based on skin colour.
How many black speakers I can show you who proudly 
proclaim from various forums that they are "American 
(or British or whatever) and Black - and proud to be both"?
So only blacks can be proud to be black but the same type
of statement if uttered by a White person, all hell will break 
loose.  This is nonsense and only blind political correctness.

Secondly, given a chance, how many Blacks would like to
remain Black or choose some other colour? If they would
have chosen white colour, why they should blame others
who are able to exercise their right to choose? And if they
still wanted to remain Black, do not they recognize the right
of others to choose the colour of their liking same way?
If they choose Black and are not considered racist, why
people choosing another colour should be branded racist?

The only principle should be people should not be ill-treated
based on gender, race, colour, nationality or financial status.
But there is no point in pretending these differences do not 
exist. People like beauty and there are parameters like a good
athletic body, height, posture, skin tone, hair, teeth, eyes
etc. which seek common attributes by experience what looks
better.  Live that.  Admiration of tall and athletic is not 
insulting to short and beer belly person.

Actually, considering white as racist and black as non-racist 
implies that white is superior and black is inferior and you
have to 'support' the naturally weak against naturally strong.
This itself is sub-conscious racism.

We should only say it is different and it is everyone's sense of
aesthetic how to look - whether tall, dark and handsome or
short, white and shabby.  Accept the difference and celebrate
the diversity instead of demanding dead regimentation and
colourless uniformity.

So not closing the factories of fairness creams but continuing
them and not considering any person inferior based on colour
is the answer.  Without knowing, resistance to fairness cream
assumes black means inferior. Will there be any resistance if 
tomorrow there is sun-tan cream which will make you look dark?
Fashions do change. 

SANJEEV


On Tuesday, 9 June, 2020, 04:06:01 pm IST, Saleem Samad saleemsamad@hotmail.com [mukto-mona] <mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


 

Of Racism and Whitening Cream Culture
SALEEM SAMAD

An Indian actor got called out for protesting racism while endorsing whitening creams in TVCs (television commercials). Instead of echoing her protest, hundreds of voices on social media blasted the glamour actor for "shameless" and "pseudo-liberal" jibes against racism in the United States when they advertise whitening creams to be bold and beautiful.
The global outcry after the first-degree murder of African-American George Floyd in the street of Minnesota in the US has once again raised eyebrows among policy-makers, social scientists, and civil rights defenders.
Social and political tensions that have long been simmering just beneath the surface of the global economic order have begun to boil over, as evidenced most vividly by the protests in the US over the death of a black person, by four police officers in Minneapolis.
Ignoring coronavirus health safety advice, from London to Auckland, Toronto to Berlin, and Copenhagen to Madrid, demonstrators gathered in thousands to express solidarity with the #BlackLivesMatter protests against police brutality in America.
The fault-line has been ignored by politicians of both camps of Democrats and Republicans.
In the lockdown during the virus outbreak, in mid-March, more than 40 million workers have filed unemployment claims in the US, and more and more families are pushed to the brink of poverty.
American civil rights activists often cry wolf, arguing violence breeds violence, and repression breeds retaliation. The cautionary messages of rights defenders usually fell into deaf ears of politicians and society leaders.
Life seems to be simplified in black and white colour code. Profiling a person having black or white hearts, so are bank loans or utility bills defaulters blacklisted. It is expected the priests and Muslim clerics are in white, while the executioners in prison wear black.
Deposed Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's speeches were laced with satire and a sense of humour which made him a controversial statesman. He once said: "Racism will never end if people still use black to symbolize bad luck and white for peace."
There is no reason for the white supremacist to admire the dictator Mugabe but his quotes from speeches will be remembered when he says: "Racism will never end if people still wear white clothes to weddings and black clothes to funerals."
In a country where a government, politicians, national institutions, and state policy surreptitiously incite racism to settle scores in a plea to crack down on opposition and dissidents, such state policies further marginalize minorities for their belief, faith, ethnicity, race, language, and culture. Social scientists warn that where there is racism, the parameters of repression and inequality in society remain visible.
The social construction of racism is built in our hearts and minds. Unknowingly, millions developed a perception that evil is black and angels are draped in white. Unfortunately, such a colour-coded concept is in children's storybooks and school textbooks.
Indian actor Abhay Deol criticized his glitz colleagues in the Bollywood industry, saying that "woke Indian celebrities" have been speaking out on #BlackLivesMatter but failing to speak up on similar instances within the country.
The tradition in South Asia is for young women eligible for marriage to apply turmeric on their face and hands, an ancient tradition enabling her skin to glow when seated at the ceremony -- or use whitening creams to be fair and beautiful.
Whereas, in the west, women love to have their skin tanned in the summer, bathing in sunshine.
The day when the demand for skin whitening cream sale plummets, only then can a nation be redefined to be non-racist.
It's high time to admit the vanity of a false distinction.

First published in the Dhaka Tribune, 9 June 2020

Saleem Samad is an independent journalist, media rights defender, recipient of Ashoka Fellowship and Hellman-Hammett Award. He could be reached at saleemsamad@hotmail.com. Twitter @saleemsamad

alt
An Indian actor got called out for protesting racism while endorsing whitening creams in TVCs (television commercials). Instead of echoing her protest, hundreds of voices on social media blasted the glamour actor for "shameless" and "pseudo-liberal" jibes against racism in the United States when they advertise whitening creams to be bold and beautiful.
www.dhakatribune.com

#StaySafeStayHome
><((((o>><((((o><o))))><><((((o>
SALEEM Samad
Recipient of Ashoka Fellow (1991) & Hellman-Hammett Award (2005)
Freelance Journalist & Columnist
Correspondent, Reporters Without Border (RSF)
+8801711-530207 phone

+1-718-713-4364 ePhone
+1-863-774-1849 eFax

Email: saleemsamad@hotmail.com

Twitter: @saleemsamad

Skype: saleemsamad

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/saleem.samad

Blog: http://bangladeshwatchdog.blogspot.com/

P Save a tree, think before you print this e-mail


__._,_.___

Posted by: sanjeev kulkarni <jeevkulkarni@yahoo.com>


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190





__,_._,___

[mukto-mona] DT Opinion: Of Racism and Whitening Cream Culture



Of Racism and Whitening Cream Culture
SALEEM SAMAD

An Indian actor got called out for protesting racism while endorsing whitening creams in TVCs (television commercials). Instead of echoing her protest, hundreds of voices on social media blasted the glamour actor for "shameless" and "pseudo-liberal" jibes against racism in the United States when they advertise whitening creams to be bold and beautiful.
The global outcry after the first-degree murder of African-American George Floyd in the street of Minnesota in the US has once again raised eyebrows among policy-makers, social scientists, and civil rights defenders.
Social and political tensions that have long been simmering just beneath the surface of the global economic order have begun to boil over, as evidenced most vividly by the protests in the US over the death of a black person, by four police officers in Minneapolis.
Ignoring coronavirus health safety advice, from London to Auckland, Toronto to Berlin, and Copenhagen to Madrid, demonstrators gathered in thousands to express solidarity with the #BlackLivesMatter protests against police brutality in America.
The fault-line has been ignored by politicians of both camps of Democrats and Republicans.
In the lockdown during the virus outbreak, in mid-March, more than 40 million workers have filed unemployment claims in the US, and more and more families are pushed to the brink of poverty.
American civil rights activists often cry wolf, arguing violence breeds violence, and repression breeds retaliation. The cautionary messages of rights defenders usually fell into deaf ears of politicians and society leaders.
Life seems to be simplified in black and white colour code. Profiling a person having black or white hearts, so are bank loans or utility bills defaulters blacklisted. It is expected the priests and Muslim clerics are in white, while the executioners in prison wear black.
Deposed Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's speeches were laced with satire and a sense of humour which made him a controversial statesman. He once said: "Racism will never end if people still use black to symbolize bad luck and white for peace."
There is no reason for the white supremacist to admire the dictator Mugabe but his quotes from speeches will be remembered when he says: "Racism will never end if people still wear white clothes to weddings and black clothes to funerals."
In a country where a government, politicians, national institutions, and state policy surreptitiously incite racism to settle scores in a plea to crack down on opposition and dissidents, such state policies further marginalize minorities for their belief, faith, ethnicity, race, language, and culture. Social scientists warn that where there is racism, the parameters of repression and inequality in society remain visible.
The social construction of racism is built in our hearts and minds. Unknowingly, millions developed a perception that evil is black and angels are draped in white. Unfortunately, such a colour-coded concept is in children's storybooks and school textbooks.
Indian actor Abhay Deol criticized his glitz colleagues in the Bollywood industry, saying that "woke Indian celebrities" have been speaking out on #BlackLivesMatter but failing to speak up on similar instances within the country.
The tradition in South Asia is for young women eligible for marriage to apply turmeric on their face and hands, an ancient tradition enabling her skin to glow when seated at the ceremony -- or use whitening creams to be fair and beautiful.
Whereas, in the west, women love to have their skin tanned in the summer, bathing in sunshine.
The day when the demand for skin whitening cream sale plummets, only then can a nation be redefined to be non-racist.
It's high time to admit the vanity of a false distinction.

First published in the Dhaka Tribune, 9 June 2020

Saleem Samad is an independent journalist, media rights defender, recipient of Ashoka Fellowship and Hellman-Hammett Award. He could be reached at saleemsamad@hotmail.com. Twitter @saleemsamad


#StaySafeStayHome
><((((o>><((((o><o))))><><((((o>
SALEEM Samad
Recipient of Ashoka Fellow (1991) & Hellman-Hammett Award (2005)
Freelance Journalist & Columnist
Correspondent, Reporters Without Border (RSF)
+8801711-530207 phone

+1-718-713-4364 ePhone
+1-863-774-1849 eFax

Email: saleemsamad@hotmail.com

Twitter: @saleemsamad

Skype: saleemsamad

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/saleem.samad

Blog: http://bangladeshwatchdog.blogspot.com/

P Save a tree, think before you print this e-mail


__._,_.___

Posted by: Saleem Samad <saleemsamad@hotmail.com>


****************************************************
Mukto Mona plans for a Grand Darwin Day Celebration: 
Call For Articles:

http://mukto-mona.com/wordpress/?p=68

http://mukto-mona.com/banga_blog/?p=585

****************************************************

VISIT MUKTO-MONA WEB-SITE : http://www.mukto-mona.com/

****************************************************

"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
               -Beatrice Hall [pseudonym: S.G. Tallentyre], 190





__,_._,___