The Asian Age

Meghalaya woman told to leave club over Khasi outfit

At Delhi Golf Club, she was told to leave as she looked ‘like a maid’

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New Delhi, June 27: A woman from Meghalaya was asked to leave the dining room of a plush Delhi club for wearing a traditiona­l Khasi outfit, which its staffers believed looked like a “maid’s uniform”, her employer said on Tuesday.

Tailin Lyngdoh, who was wearing a jainsem, traditiona­lly worn by Khasi women, was invited with the employer, Dr Nivedita Barthakur Sondhi, to a lunch hosted by a member of The Delhi Golf Club in the heart of the capital on June 25.

“Two staffers came to Lyngdoh and told her she looked like a maid and was not allowed there,” Ms Sondhi said.

The inference was that she was dressed differentl­y and her clothes made her “look like a maid,” Ms Sondhi added.

Ms Lyngdoh told reporters she was asked to leave while they were having lunch. “The manager said, ‘It is not allowed, so you must go out.’ I went out, but it was very sad for me to hear such a thing,” she said. Ms Lyngdoh, who is Ms Sondhi’s son’s governess, said she had travelled to many places but had never heard such a remark. “Everybody has compliment­ed me on my traditiona­l dress and nobody has ever said such a thing to me,” she said.

In a statement issued later, the club said it had apologised to the member

who had hosted the lunch, while maintainin­g that the guests had not been asked to leave the club premises. In a Facebook post, Ms Sondhi said, “Lyngdoh, an extremely proud, Khasi lady who has travelled the world in her jainsem from London to UAE, was thrown out of the Delhi Golf Club because her dress was taken for a maid’s uniform!”

Though she was at the

lunch as an invitee, she was “humiliated”, Ms Sondhi wrote.

The “two gatekeeper­s” did not apologise to her, she said. “It is appalling that a citizen of India is judged on her dress and treated as a pariah,” she wrote.

The club in its statement said the incident could have been “handled better” by a staff member, who has been asked to give an “explanatio­n”.

“Disciplina­ry action is in process,” it said. The club said “an apology has been made” to the member whose guest Ms Lyngdoh was. “This has been unconditio­nally accepted. It was also confirmed that the guests were not asked to leave the club premises,” the statement said.

Ms Sondhi, however, said neither she nor Lyngdoh had been contacted by the club or received an apology from it.

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