Courtsey: http://www.hindu.com/mag/2009/12/27/stories/2009122750290700.htm
AFFLUENZA

*Indian, anyone? *

BY HINDOL SENGUPTA

   Why are we uncomfortable about wearing Indian clothes to the workplace?

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*

Since the “corporate wardrobe” for some reason does not include Indian
clothes, they have become occasional wear.
*
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 PHOTOS: AP

*STYLE STATEMENT: The sari is always fashionable but where's Indian wear for
men? *

What the prime minister wears is not good enough for Urban Pind. Why else
would I be thrown out from this, as their website says, “urban bar” for
wearing Indian clothes?

A couple of months ago, I walked into this south Delhi restaurant (maybe
it's a bar or a lounge, who knows?) wearing what I have often worn to
interview ministers on my show: kurta-pyjamas. The guard sneered, scowled
and told me, “These things (meaning my poor kurta-pyjamas) are not allowed
in.”The manager agreed and said, by way of aggressive explanation, that they
have a “young” image and the Pind, as it so happens village in Punjabi,
cannot break that “code”.

This week I thought about this when two development professionals — have you
noticed how their tribe has soared with each passing year — giggled, as it
so happens at the Gymkhana Club, and asked, in their distinct I lived in New
York twang, if I was a “ neta”.

I wanted to tell them what Shah rRukh Khan once said about Madhuri Dikshit:
“These days she has an accent, so I find her less interesting” but I had a
bigger point to make. Why, said I, is it that in India people always seem
surprised when you wear Indian clothes? In Bombay, I gather only Javed
Akhtar wears Indian. Everyone else dresses like Himesh. Oops, actually
that's not entirely true. South Bombay wants to dress like Ratan Tata and
manages usually to dress like Harshad Mehta.

So why are we uncomfortable about wearing Indian clothes?

Colonial hangover

Of course, it is our colonial hangover and I believe it runs deeper than
just copying the Whites. After all, when the Whites were here, we were happy
to flaunt our bejwelled-ness. In 1921, for instance, at the height of the
royals cosying up to the British to distance themselves from the grumble of
independence, even when the Prince of Wales came to India, the Maharani of
Burdwan wore gold tissue embossed with roses with an overlaid sari of gold
lace.



 “I felt very sad,” he said, “here was India, with all its textiles and
colours and textures and there was not a single person who was wearing any
of that! These people could have been anywhere in the world, there was
nothing distinct about India.”

Colonial baggage is not the only reason for this loss. One of the biggest
reasons of the loss of Indian clothes has been something Sabysachi
Mukherjee, to Indian fashion what Vishwanathan Anand is to chess, keeps
discussing with me.

Look around you, office after office is bereft of Indian clothes. In the age
of industry, connectedness and entrepreneurship Indian clothes are rarely
seen because they failed, or we failed to make them, office wear, and
thereby, everyday wear.

Since most of us no longer wear Indian clothes to work, since the “corporate
wardrobe” for some reason does not include Indian clothes, they have become
occasional wear — costumes not clothes.

So we wear Indian clothes for weddings and deaths and festivals but on most
days, most of us, especially in northern and western India, do not wear
Indian clothes. Men are specifically to blame since women still wear the
occasional sari and salwar kameez to work but men de rigueur wear shirts and
trousers — mostly blues and whites. Therefore death to Indian clothes and
even bright, some would say Indian, colours.

Festive costumes

Why don't we wear Indian clothes to work? Why don't Indian news anchors, for
instance, wear bandhgalas instead of suits? Even in news TV, Indian clothes
are costumes to be donned to festive days. Udayan Mukherjee, the face of the
markets, wears dazzling bandhgalason mahurat trading but not otherwise.
Rajdeep Sardesai wears the occasional kurta but is usually in his unkempt
cool, about-to- run-out-of-the-newsroom light shirts and dark trousers.
Prannoy Roy also dons the odd bandhgala but seems far more comfortable in
his impeccable suits.

Barkha Dutt, thankfully, sticks to kurtas and salwar kameezs but most of the
women are swept up in suits. The only beacon of hope is Nidhi Razdan who has
single-handedly, sumptuously, brought back the sari on TV. And I do believe
most Indian male anchors would look far more polished in nice bandhgala—
that covers the Indian paunch more neatly than a suit.

And it is not true that Indian clothes cannot be business wear. No, forget
the Air India hostesses. That's not business wear, that's bizarre wear.
Think instead of our great power banker women — from Naina Lal Kidwai to
Chanda Kochhar to Shikha Sharma — these women have used the sari with as
much devastation as Madeline Albright used her brooches.

Can you think of any men in business who regularly wears Indian clothes? If
you can, tell me on [email protected] . I can't.

Trouble is there seems to be so few places where you can wear them! But I
have decided now to wear Indian clothes on my TV shows. The only way to
bring back the joy of Indian clothes might be to put them back on TV, get
Shah Rukh to sport them more often and then, the only thing remaining would
be to bully Urban Pind. Perhaps Rahul Gandhi will stop by one day. Wonder if
they will stop him for wearing Indian?

Hindol Sengupta is Associate Editor,Bloomberg UTV

* [email protected] *

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