Publicly holding hands should not be a political act
/There is always an underlying connotation for any action I make even tenuously perceived to be connected to queerness.
Read MoreThere is always an underlying connotation for any action I make even tenuously perceived to be connected to queerness.
Read More…the brown aunties spreading gossip are not creating these archaic standards for young women – they are merely exercising an ideology which has strictly been enforced unto them.
Read MoreInstead of being fuelled by the fact that I was the first South Asian broadcaster to present on a daytime slot on BBC Radio 1Xtra, I instead kept hearing a voice say “do you actually belong here?”
Read MoreMy queerness became a performance, so my culture could be silenced into acceptance. I learnt that was happening when it was over. Although I have shame, I don’t have regret. I’ve since understood what happened and what I really need.
Read MoreAccents surround me. People look at me as I speak and stare. In a room full of white people, I feel like my “acha” and “teek” and “hai!” are questioned. I speak in my tongue and in mums, both are foreign and offer intrigue.
Read MoreI am asexual, a person who is not attracted to anyone sexually, because that has been my nature since birth. I am sex aversive because of the negative experiences I’ve had with my consent being ignored.
Read MoreIt has taken a long time to write this piece.
Read MoreAs South Asian people, we must reflect on our prejudices and ask ourselves how we can start dismantling anti-Blackness in the community, the media, healthcare settings and other spaces we occupy.
Read MoreUpon hearing of Modi’s government’s handling of the protestors, I was reminded of the treatment of Indians, particularly Indian farmers, under British colonial rule, and I am not alone in this sentiment.
Read MoreAs the sole representative of the team abroad, [Bala Devi] currently represents a big step forward for the women’s game in India, and for the profile of Indian players on the international stage.
Read MoreDecolonising science is important to move forwards, for Western scientists to recognise the racism within their work, and to allow formerly colonised countries to trust in practices again.
Read MoreThe excitement from the first few days wore off when my responsibilities included running to three different supermarkets to purchase a very specific bar of chocolate for the boss, lugging bags of ice down flashy streets of London to stock up the office freezer.
Read MoreI watched my own mother settle in to watch this portrayal of Princess Diana with the same intensity that my grandmother afforded to Indian serials.
Read MoreOur western, phallocentric society’s idea of ‘natural body hair’ basically means being ‘bald from the eyebrows down’, and that has been reinforced deeply and broadly, on a conscious and a subconscious level.
Read MoreNot only has Masaba struggled with her Black Caribbean identity in India, but struggled with the fact that Neena raised her as a single mother in the public eye.
Read MoreBy preying on the insecurity of dark-skinned girls and boys, cosmetics brands make over $450 million annually in sales in India, and globally the skin lightening industry is worth between $10- 20 billion.
Read MoreInstead of standing in solidarity with those whose effort and struggle built the table in which we occupy, we have allowed our silence and our distance to perpetuate violence. It’s time for us to start considering what would happen if we get close.
Read MoreAs we grow up, if boundaries aren’t created or respected by our parents, we can be left unsure about whose needs should take priority in our lives: ours, or theirs.
Read MoreIt is an insult to our intelligence when politicians try to tell us that plastic aprons and a single surgical mask when serving canteen dinner, is protecting us - let alone when treating patients in a coronavirus ‘hot zone’ in hospital.
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