The Citizen (Gauteng)

Comedic blackface reveals Arab world racism

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Blackface, a practice that keeps appearing in modern media, was a supposed entertainm­ent device from a bygone era. It features white or light-skinned people caricaturi­ng those of African descent by darkening their faces with theatrical make-up.

While across much of the western world it no longer features in mainstream art or entertainm­ent, in the Middle East, you do not have to go back far to find examples.

Blackface and caricature­d depictions of black people are still seen in the media, and in most cases, they are often not even seen as offensive.

Blackface can be found particular­ly in Egypt, which is home to a sizeable Nubian minority – a group of Africans indigenous to present-day Sudan .

“When we watch TV shows or movies, black people are always inferior. And blackface is an inferior, negative and racist concept which should not belong in the Arab world. We almost never speak about this segment of Arab society – black people,” Maha Abdul Hamid, an academic and activist, tells Al Jazeera.

Film critic Joseph Fahim argues that many in the Arab world have not acknowledg­ed their own racism against black people in their society.

“Lebanese would never admit they’re racist. The Libyans would never admit they’re racist. Even people from Sudan, they would never admit that they’re racist against their own black people.

“And so it was only through, you know, like reading and being exposed to media that I realised something really awful is going on in here,” Fahim says.

Underpinni­ng this racist form of comedy is a denial of the Middle East’s history of slavery, which was not formally abolished in Arab Gulf countries until 1970. – News24 Wire

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