Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Let There Be Light

The actor makes a strong case against discrimina­tion due to the colour of one’s skin, whether in the film industry or at home

- By Namit Das (As told to Karishma Kuenzang)

It isn’t just India. The whole world will try to categorise you according to how you look. And so, when I got into acting, I faced a bias due to my skin tone. can’t blame the industry for this: from a larger point of view; we are to the world what we look like. We can’t run away from that fact. So, it’s best that you are comfortabl­e with how you look.

Handle with humour

Of course, the film industry was not the first place that I encountere­d the bias. I have plenty of experience­s in my own family because my parents are relatively fair. At 13 or 14, I fielded questions like “yaar, tu itna kaala kyun hai (why are you so dark)?” I heard the domestic help ask my mother if I was dark-skinned because I played cricket and had a tan. It was not traumatic; mostly these things were said in jest. And humour is an interestin­g tool: it can cover up what we feel and help us get over things as well. But things like this leave an impression. For the longest time, I thought I wasn’t good looking.

Make no mistake, as insensitiv­e as people could be, I never felt victimised. Life has taught me to be thankful for everything, even this. But it took me a long time to unlearn the comments about my skin tone. It’s a journey and I am still gathering confidence from the smaller things in life. That’s why this is a scary time to be alive, with filters and statements like ‘that girl is pretty, but without a filter her face looks thoda ajeeb (a little strange)’ being part of normal conversati­ons. Do I want to see myself in different colours and have people see the image and not the real me? Filters are changing both our mental make-up and how we see ourselves. The world is becoming about the version of yourself you want to put out there.

[AS A KID] I HEARD THE DOMESTIC HELP ASK MY MOTHER IF I WAS DARK-SKINNED BECAUSE I PLAYED CRICKET AND HAD A TAN NAMIT DAS, Actor No utopias

That’s also why I don’t trust the pace at which things are changing in Bollywood. I faced the bias directly, since the norm was for the male lead to be slim and fair, while I am your average Indian male. It will take a long time for sensitivit­y to become part of any culture. People have to look inside themselves and evolve. While it’s true that we are more sensitive today—the jokes of a decade ago would not be considered funny today—there is no utopian society. That’s one of those high-flying ideas that will never be reality.

Namit Das, 37, is an actor known for his role in the series A Suitable Boy. He also pursues music with his band.

I Say Chaps is an occasional guest column that allows passionate, creative people a platform to have their say.

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 ?? ?? Actor Namit Das (seen below in a still from A Suitable Boy) faced bias due to the colour of his skin
Actor Namit Das (seen below in a still from A Suitable Boy) faced bias due to the colour of his skin

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