5) I am not buying the wide-eyed innocence of many Indian fans who appear puzzled that monkey is being seen as a racist slur, particularly of the Sydney-based United Indian Association (UIA) which has apparently expressed surprise that their fellow Australians are taking umbrage at the term. Its president, Raj Natarajan, issued a statement saying that "Considering that the Monkey God is one of the revered idols of Hindu mythology and worshipped by millions, it is surprising it was considered a racist term." The UIA is either being disingenuous or has its head firmly stuck in the sand; its members live in Australia and pay some attention to the local discourse, don't they? Besides, if Harbhajan did call Symonds a monkey, I doubt that he was deifying him.
6) Let me say it. The term "monkey" when directed at a black/brown person is racist. The history of colonial racism is filled with the attempts of white rulers to depict the denizens of their black/brown colonies as savages, animals, undeveloped human beings, and unevolved… monkeys. The term in its various forms has been used by white racists to refer to people of colour. Monkey, ghetto monkey, porch monkey, tree swingers, simians, and shit slingers are slurs that have a long and distressing history. We forget it at our own peril.
7) Why exactly are we so outraged that someone could possibly level the charge of racism at us? After all, we practice our own forms of discrimination on the basis of caste, religion, occupation, language, region etc. The term "racist" may be unfamiliar in our context, but the workings of racism aren't. Bigotry and intolerance against a group of people based upon their inherited identities isn't exactly something that only happens elsewhere. Notions of the intrinsic superiority of one set of people over another and a resultant prejudice towards the latter aren't alien to our social landscape.
8) We are also fairly adept at buying into a racist structure when we move abroad. The conversations about African Americans in the homes of the U.S. NRIs distressingly echo the views of racist white Americans. Even before entering the U.S., Indian immigrants are armed with the 'knowledge' that blacks are lazy, untrustworthy, and dangerous. These immigrants may have white friends, but seldom interact with the black community. They may transgress cultural boundaries by marrying whites, but almost never by coupling up with an African American. They even have their own version of the 'nigger' epithet: kallu.
9) In this whole sordid issue, what got the raw end of the deal was the issue of racism itself. Once again, it has been boiled down to the actions or attitudes of one person against another. Racism however, not unlike poverty, is a structural problem. Structurally racist systems are configured to perpetuate inequalities. Notwithstanding the 40-odd years since the passage of the Civil Rights Act and the end of Jim Crow laws in the U.S., the discrepancies between whites and blacks on income, wealth, health, education, rates of incarceration and other economic and social indicators continue to be vast. It is the reductive understanding of racism as a mere individual act that gives us the comical spectacle of white umpire Darrell Hair suing the ICC for racial discrimination.
10) Sitting U.S. Senator George Allen of Virginia was giving his stump speech in 2006 when he noticed a staffer from the opposition camp taping him, and paused to ask his audience to "give a welcome to macaca here". Macaca, a word for the rhesus monkey, is a slur used by Francophone whites against the local blacks in Africa and it was speculated that Senator Allen had learned it from his mother, a Tunisian of French descent. The staffer, the only person of colour in the gathering, was S.R.Siddarth, an Indian-American. The same system of racial discrimination that allows us to feel superior to blacks and call them monkeys makes monkeys of us too.