leenawords

these are the archives where i'm stashing stuff i've written in various other places.

Friday, May 26, 2006

It looks like the film "Provoked" starring Ash and based on the real-life story of Kiranjit Ahluwahlia is already finished and was premiered at Cannes. I don't think Ash is the greatest actor, but I'm glad she's using her power to bring light to the issue of domestic violence, and willing to relay her own experience of abuse.

Although, I'm not sure how much power she has anymore, since people are always ready to bring a woman down. People have been less enthusiastic about her since she broke up with Vivek, and making her out to be some sort of cold-hearted breaker of man-hearts. Gimme a break.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Lakireddy v. Kaavya -- Who's the Veritable Brown Villain?

(This has been cross-posted to Pass the Roti.)

I just typed “Lakireddy Bali Reddy” into Technorati, and it returned a scant twelve posts, several of which are completely unrelated to the case I will discuss shortly.

Then just for the hell of it, I typed in “Kaavya Viswanathan,” and got back three thousand, two hundred and twenty-three posts. And keep in mind many people wouldn’t have spelled her name correctly.

I know it can be fun to trash a young brown sister who almost became a remarkable overnight success, but are we really that much more schadenfreude than we are sincere? Because if our motivation in obsessing over “Kaavyagate” was really to put down the collective axe on bad brown behavior, I think the tale of Reddy and his heinous crimes of power and exploitation — along the lines of gender, age, class, caste, and immigration status — would have made the rounds in a big way starting about six years ago, such that his Defense would have absolutely no case in the hearing that occurred on Monday.

So who is this abominable creep of whom I speak? There is a pretty good factual background on Diana Russell’s web site (note: some of the racial/cultural references on the site may be problematic; feel free to comment on that). Basically, he is an incredibly wealthy landlord based in Berkeley, California (owns several restaurants and other business and residential property), who trafficked in several girls from his village in India over a thirteen-year period to extract cheap labor and sexually abuse them. Although the exact extent of emotional distress caused to some of the victims is unknown and was indeed the matter in dispute today, it is undisputed that one of the victims was pregnant with his child — at age 17 — when she died from carbon monoxide poisoning in the housing he provided for her. Yet, from Russell’s site:

On March 7, 2001, Reddy pleaded guilty to smuggling teenage girls from India for sex (sic) — including one as young as 13 — in a plea deal. In return for this admission, John Kennedy, the Assistant U.S. Prosecuting Attorney, whose job it was to represent Reddy’s victims, recommended that he spend only between 5 and 6 1/2 years in federal prison and pay only two million dollars in restitution (his Berkeley properties alone are worth more than $80 million) to three surviving victims and the parents of the Prattipati sisters. Shockingly, in return for Reddy’s limited admission of guilt, the Alameda District Attorney agreed not to charge Reddy for statutory rape of the girls despite the fact that he had forced sex on them for many years. Kennedy was clearly derelict in his duty to Reddy’s victims when he accepted Reddy’s outrageously minimal admissions of guilt as well as for proposing an equally outrageously minimal sentence for these extremely serious crime.

In the end, all he got was eight years prison time, which started in 2001. And the hearing held on May 22, 2006 was to cut down even that, because of alleged “obstruction of justice” coming from an interpreter involved in the case, who apparently encouraged some of the victims to exaggerate their emotional distress. Luckily, the judge didn’t buy that this “obstruction of justice” exceeded the kind caused by Reddy himself, and retained Reddy’s 97-month sentence. However, what scared me was that the courtroom was packed with supporters of Reddy — at least sixty of them. There were but a handful of people present to stand up for the victims and against the exploitation that this man committed. The press release from ASATA, Maitri, and South Asian Sisters can be found here. These three groups in addition to Berkeley-based Narika have been tracking the case for several years, with ASATA having been formed in 2000 in direct response to the case.

Would the response from the community have been different if the perpetrator were not South Asian? Would it then have been more widely discussed and bemoaned how young South Asian women were victims of this awful exploitation, because it also had a racial element? Is this another case of not wanting to air out our dirty laundry? Do some of us think it is less bad that it was (sort of) intra-community than it would be if the abuse came from someone of a different race, suggesting that there is some sort of entitlement or at least tacit acceptance for gender-based oppression within our community?

Or perhaps some of the reservations on the part of “progressive” brown folks come from the fact that we are against the prison-industrial complex, and the “lock them up and throw away the key” mentality? While I would agree that our criminal justice system has gotten way out of hand, we lock up too many people, we have backward priorities, we should prioritize rehabilitation over retribution, and all that jazz… I just can’t apply that theory to this case, where it is a clear crime of power. I just don’t see progressives running around trying to free skinheads who committed hate crimes from the PIC — nor should we have any sympathy for people who commit gender-based crimes of power, whether inside or outside the community.

In any case, it makes me highly uncomfortable as a brown women to think that if I got caught up some nerdy academic scandal, my brown brethren would be the first to trash me in their sadistic little grapevines, and my name would be blown off the charts in Technorati; but were I to be completely and utterly exploited and violated by a Desi man, his name and good reputation might be left virtually untouched.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

John Gibson to White Women: "Breed!"

Reason #1: the "Hispanics" in the US.

Reason #2: the Muslims in Europe. Oh but he does clarify there that it's not just white women:
I said, fine, but it was also a good idea if people other than Hispanics also got busy and had more babies. Those people would include both blacks and whites. I suppose Asians, too. I said you can't expect Hispanics to do all the work when it comes to supplying our country with babies.
I suppose that would include me! Let's get on with it, then: procreation, not recreation!

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Here's a really good article on Darfur and the way it has been shrugged off as a Zionist-coopted movement. Although the issue of backlash is understandable, I'm always disappointed and outraged when the struggles of the marginalized within the marginalized are undermined to save face of the wider community. If that's a case of ethnic cleansing, we have gender cleansing in India and its US diaspora, and sexual orientation cleansing in Iran. Oh, and how can I forget the Brahmin Samaj of North America -- wtf?!

If people are so concerned that these issues are only brought up by racist people outside our cultures to justify war and imperialism, when will we address them as human rights issues on our own and show the world that our cultures and communities do stand up first and foremost for the rights of our marginalized? I certainly don't endorse misguided western intervention, but I am even more sick of our constant kowtowing to patriarchal brown elites. How many more non-straight-brown-men will we sacrifice while we wait for the backlash to pass? (Not that among women of color we have our shit together either; check out this interview re: the politics of respectability and the Duke rape case. Fucking shit.)

Related: Let's not forget the US mainstream liberal quest to ignore gender and sexual orientation and class AND race, and everybody who is left of Bush should just unite to get him out of office and quit it with the "balkanization." But as Ann Bartow brings up often, the language our liberal friends employ is very problematically gendered; whattup with the Heathers? (I had no idea that metaphor was used so much!)

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Bollywood Music Fun Facts!

I love the song "Kaho Na Kaho" from Murder, and knew off the bat it was ripping off some Middle Eastern song, since by keeping in Arabic lyrics, they haven't even tried to fake the funk. But there's indeed so many versions of this song! Check this out from this page:
Kaho Na Kaho (Amir Jamal)/ Tamally Ma'ak (Amr Diab) You must have seen the promos for a new movie titled 'Murder' ( a rip-off of the Diane Keaton - Richard Gere starrer 'Unfaithful' which came out in 2002 - well, what else do you expect when Mahesh Bhatt is at the helm of affairs!). There's an interesting song, 'Kaho na kaho' that is garnering all attention since it also has Arabic lyrics in between. As far as I understand, Anu Malik is credited with its music (at least in the promos!), but the origins of this song go a long way back!

'Kaho na kaho' is sung by Pakistani singer Amir Jamal and is his composition from his 2003 album by the same name. If you had heard the song, you'd have noticed Arabic lyrics that goes, '...tamally ma'ak'. And there lies the twist! This song was originally composed by Sherif Tag (lyrics by Ahmed Ali Mousa) and sung by Arabic singer Amr Diab under the name (what else?) 'Tamally Ma'ak' in the year 2000 (from the album of the same name). Amir Jamal simply lifted this song and added Hindi lyrics and used it in his album. This song has also found its way in to 'Murder', thanks to the Bhatts! Its one thing to copy a song with no credit whatsoever to its original composer and its completely another thing to use the same title/ lyrics in the copied version! And does 'Tamally Ma'ak' sound similar? It just might...'cos Sanjeev Darshan have already lifted 2 songs from this album for the Anil Kapoor starrer 'Rishthey'! Check out the page on Sanjeev Darshan for details!

Listen to
Kaho na kaho [Amir Jamal] | Tamally Ma'ak [Amr Diab]

Another interesting aspect here is that Amir Jamal is not the only person to lift this song. There are, on last count, 6 other versions of this song, besides Amir Jamal's Hindi/ Arabic version! And not even one version is legal - not one was done with permission from Amr Diab or with a credit to him! But this sure shows how popular Amr Diab is across the globe! Here's a list of the other lifts of Tamally Ma'ak...Thanks to information from the website on Amr Diab.
Israel: Artist: Orna & Moshe Datz, Song: You're In My Heart, Year: 2001 [Listen to You're In My Heart]
Bulgaria: Artist: Ivana, Song: Skitam se az, Year: 2002 - [Listen to Skitam se az]
Argentina: Artist: Andrea Del Valle Bela, Song: Te voy a dejar, Year: 2004 - [Listen to Te voy a dejar]
Spain: Artist: Carmona, Song: Te Quiero Ti, Year: 2003 - [Listen to Te Quiero Ti]
Russia: Artist: Avraam Russo, Song: Daleko Daleko, Year: 2002 [Listen to Daleko Daleko]
Japan: Resung in Arabic by the Japanese band 'Warna' and released as a video. Watch the video at this Amr Diab site!

Monday, May 08, 2006

I just thought of something.


Steve Martin = Vivek Oberoi in 30 years!