[The tragedy of Kuchibhotla is not that the life of an accomplished
engineer, or a kind person, or Indian, was cut short―though he was all
those things. His death would have been as much of a tragedy if he
were unemployed, undocumented, and Muslim. The abrupt, violent end of
a life is a tragedy no matter what.]

https://in.news.yahoo.com/kansas-victim-indian-thats-not-192001405.html

Kansas Victim Was Indian, but That's Not the Point

Elle    
Jaya Saxena
Elle28 February 2017

On Wednesday, a white man in Kansas yelled "Get out of my country"
before shooting at two Indian men in a bar. He killed one, Srinivas
Kuchibhotla, and injured Kuchibhotla's friend, Alok Madasani, as well
as bystander Ian Grillot, who tried to intervene. It's a tragic story
that lies at the intersection of violence, immigration, racism, and
politics. It also highlights the importance of how we talk about
immigrants and victims of color.

Many news outlets have latched on to a particular part of the story:
After fleeing the scene, shooter Adam Purinton told a bartender that
he was hiding out because he had killed two "Middle Eastern" men.
While it's important to note the attack was racially motivated, there
are no shortage of outlets making "Man Thought He Was Shooting Two
Middle Eastern Men" the crux of the story. What headlines like this
imply is that the shooting is especially tragic because the victims
were actually Indian (not Middle Eastern), not because they were,
well, victims.

This focus shift happened a lot post 9/11, when a spate of hate crimes
against anyone vaguely resembling the attackers plagued the United
States. Narratives circled around how the victims were actually Sikh,
or Hindu, or not from the countries the attackers were from, as if,
had the victims been Muslim, the attack would have made more sense.

Photo credit: NOAH SEELAM / Stringer / GettyView photos
Photo credit: NOAH SEELAM / Stringer / Getty
More
This instance of a man killing the "wrong" kind of victim is
especially troubling because it leans upon stereotypes of the "better"
kind of brown person to have in this country. Many reports of this
recent crime also rely on commentary from friends and family of the
victims espousing how smart and well-mannered Kuchibhotla was. The
Kansas City Star lists his advanced degrees, and a friend of his told
the Washington Post he was "levelheaded and technically skilled."
Humanizing details like this tend to be part of any murder story, but
they take on a different tone when the victim was an immigrant and the
target of a hate crime.

Indians are one of several racial minorities in America who fall
victim to the model-minority myth, which is rooted in other forms of
racism. "The model-minority designation suggests that Asian Americans
are succeeding by conventional American standards," Adia Harvey
Wingfield wrote for The Atlantic. Model minorities are the "desirable"
immigrants who are hardworking, respectful, and, most importantly,
ready to assimilate.

The current immigration conversation is rife with impassioned
arguments about these sorts of immigrants―and they seem harmless
enough. Arguments focus on how hard immigrants work, how the American
economy would collapse if it weren't for immigrants, and how the next
Einstein could be a Syrian girl turned away from our shores. Though
the model-minority narrative administers certain privileges, it can
also mask a bigger problem: Even as it celebrates, it doesn't protect
its recipients from xenophobic violence that still festers, especially
under an administration that's been hostile to immigrants of any kind.

***The tragedy of Kuchibhotla is not that the life of an accomplished
engineer, or a kind person, or Indian, was cut short―though he was all
those things. His death would have been as much of a tragedy if he
were unemployed, undocumented, and Muslim. The abrupt, violent end of
a life is a tragedy no matter what.*** [Emphasis added.]


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to