Saturday, January 21, 2006

Crash

About a month ago, I saw a movie called Crash featuring quite a start-studded cast, including Matt Dillon, Don Cheadle, Brendan Fraser, Sandra Bullock, Thandie Newton and more. I got the distinct feeling that I was seeing a good movie after a long time!

Don Cheadle speaks these opening lines at the scene of a car crash: "It's the sense of touch. In any real city, you walk, you know? You brush past people, people bump into you. In L.A., nobody touches you. We're always behind this metal and glass. I think we miss that touch so much, that we crash into each other, just so we can feel something."

The movie is about several sets of people with different ethnic backgrounds living in LA, and how their seemingly separate lives "crash" into each other over a series of plausible events. The movie evokes mixed feelings of sympathy, anger, sadness and hope in the viewer; and I must admit I believe the plot writer deserves an oscar for this. The direction and acting were outstanding as well.

I'm not going into the details of the movie; you can find the plot and reviews at any of a thousand sites on the web. Rather, I wanted to talk about how the movie correlates with the real world.

A storekeeper returns one morning to find his shop vandalized and large green letters on the wall abusing Arabs. His wife stares at the wall and cries, "Arabs? We're not Arabs! When did Persian become Arab?"

In real life, I heard stories of people getting lynched by drunken gangs in the US simply because they "looked like Osama bin Laden" or "acted suspicious, like a terrorist". On most occasions they were, in truth, Indians or Turks or Pakistanis, and most certainly not terrorists. It seems to me that the objective of the terrorists is achieved, at least in part, if this is the paranoia with which people are behaving. Read this post by my friend Rahul, talking about his experience on a PATH train near New York City. It ought to help you understand what I'm talking about.

"We need votes from the black community. What we need, is for the people to see me pinning a medal on a black man.... ok, who was that guy who saved those people at that landslide a few days ago?"
"Er... that wasn't a black man, sir. He was an Iraqi named Saddam (some muslim sounding surname)"
"He was.. what? Iraqi? You want me to pin a medal on an Iraqi named Saddam? Get out of my sight!"

The racial and ethnic background of a person has become more defining today than the actual character of that person. The moment you see a non-white person, what is your first impression of that person? Is your opinion coloured by the colour of his skin? It's really sad today that people can't treat individuals as individuals. University towns are usually quite liberal and broad-minded, but step into the "real" world you'll be surprised by what people think they know about you.

Two black men try to do a carjacking, and it goes awry when it turns out that the driver is also black. After an intense sequence in which one thief runs away and the driver hides the other from the cops, the man tells the thief before letting him go: "Look at me. You shame me. You shame yourself."

In spite of all my talk about individuality, statistics do not lie. There is some measure of logic even in the paranoia. That one fact is even sadder than all the things I've said uptil now.

The USA is quite a cultural milieu, and has begun to come apart at the seams. Terrorism has probably just catalyzed the inevitable. I don't quite blame anyone; I think the paranioa and the stereotyping is natural for any country forced to endure the presence of a hundred different cultures. I wonder what the future holds; but I think that the gradual absorption of people from eclectic backgrounds over generations has had a moderating and healing effect. Perhaps one day in the future people can truly interact as equals. One can only hope.

Cheers,
Prashanth.

12 comments:

alraqs said...

~ crash is a great movie, truly moving...I agree, when paranoia begins to gain validity is the point when things start to fall apart...but not just coz of terrorists, people themselves are responsible for some of that, esp. in a democracy...
~ People tend to be drawn to others that look like themselves, it happens on a daily basis, esp. in the cultural chaos that is the US...problems begin when people drawn to themselves begin excluding, tangibly or otherwise...a multi-way process, indicative of breakdown of trust in others...
~ FYI--just heard abt. this documentary on mixed race: http://www.mavinfoundation.org/news/news_011906_filmrelease.html

alraqs said...

"One can only hope."
I disagree, one can always do more than just hope...thats the best thing about hope, it can always be acted upon, that is if we so choose to do so...
trusting humans in general and acting on that trust on a daily basis has much value...
as Ed Abbey said, "sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul"...granted he was often a crazy guy, but his heart was in a good place :)

Artful Badger said...

I think people form sterotypes because it makes it so much easier for you to deal with people. It is so much easier to justify your behaviour or opinion.

Everyone has stereotypes about everyone else. It works because 50% of the population fits 50% of the stereotype. It provides a safety mechanism. Thats why its there in the first place but it goes wrong a lot.
- When I came from Sishya to PSBB everyone had a very different notion about who I was. Some were 'surprised' when I didn't do so badly in class.
- In Sishya most students from PSBB/DAV are stereotyped as 'thair sadam' cases.
- Indians have stereotypes of Westerners. Many of which are not true. But, there are some who do fit it.
- Westerners have about India (elephants etc.)
- South Indians have on North Indians
- North Indians have on South Indians

Artful Badger said...

That way the US is a lot more open than any country. There is so much inter-racial interaction. Even when someone comes up in my head I don't think he/she is Indian or Iranian or Chinese or American.

Prashanth said...

Alraqs,

Tilde#1: Yes. Thats why I said terrorism is just a catalyst, not the cause.

Tilde#2: I find it hard to make friends with people who are not Indians. There seems to be some kind of an invisible barrier!

Tilde#3: Thanks for the info. I think they've taken it one level higher, they are talking about people of mixed heritage.

Tildeless: Oh yes, hope should always be backed up with action. Even the fatalists say that God helps those who help themselves. But I was basically making my comments from the stand point of an outsider to the US: I still can't bring myself to think of me as part of it! So, my hopes are for the US, with me being effectively detached from the country in mind or in body!

Prashanth said...

Ramani,

Like I said, there is some logic to the stereotyping as well as the paranoia. And extending it to another familiar cultural milieu, namely our own country, I can't help but smile. Thankfully we have the bond of nationalism, or the Gujarat riots would have been a drop in a pond.

PSBB people are thair-sadam cases? LOL. Agreed, some of the brilliant types are rather goody-goody and studious and orthodox momma's boys, but Ranga, Arvind etc are, putting it ineloquently, cool. But of course, you know that and you're just saying how wrong people can be about stereotypes, but it's so funny!

It's good that you don't think about other people as chinese or iranian or whatever, but I'm serious when I say that university towns are more open in that way. Doubtless those chinese and iranians don't think "I'm talking to an Indian" first thing when they speak to you. But I seriously doubt if that applies when you step out.

Artful Badger said...

It depends actually. If a person is Indian there is some immediate context to talk to the person even if you don't know them. If they happen to be Iranian or whatever you need a specific context, maybe working in the same lab etc. I think the problem here is not so much sterotype or prejudice or anything but more about real language and cultural differences.

alraqs said...

hmm...I think its interesting how 'sense of place' or 'belonging' determines what we are passionate about...Also, I see nothing overly wrong in thinking of someone as from this country or that, as long as we dont discriminate based on those geographical differences...and yes, it is natural to have some sort of basis for conversation and friendship with people from your own country...

Deepti Ravi said...

Stereotyping is as inevitable as the sun rising each day.. as is discrimination!! Discrimination arises in everything.. it's not just racial.. but permeates every aspect of everyone's life.. the boy in geeky glasses the sporty's tend to ignore... the maid that starched madisaru mami's tend to reproach... the world can never stop judging a clan based on one clansman's behaviour and attitude!!!

Unknown said...

a brilliant movie indeed. One of the best movies of late...Racialism is bad, but discrimination based on financial status is even worse! The great indian divide seems to be encouraging the latter at alarmingly higher proportions than ethnic discrimination!

Anonymous said...

waiting patiently for your Patriotism post...

Prashanth said...

Am not writing any patriotism post. Am not a patriotic person in the first place!