A “Sand-Ni*ger” Bridesmaid

Antiracism work is uncomfortable, challenging, and a journey that  has no finish line. It requires us to “look in the mirror” and examine  our relationships to race and racism. My journey into the antiracism  space was not strategic or planned. It was my own experiences of racism  endured as a South Asian person navigating a White world that led me to  this work. In guiding others to develop their racial consciousness and  anti-racism lens, I’ve come to realize that storytelling is a powerful  and necessary tool. It is when we tell our personal stories, that we  affirm our existence and lived experiences, but most importantly, it is  our stories that help us heal from the traumas of racism.

While  I do not have the time or space to write about all the incidents of  overt and covert racism I’ve endured throughout my life, my early  experiences of growing up in a predominantly White community were  profound enough that they caused me to feel a deep shame towards my  Indian ethnicity. As a result of the shame I learned to feel towards my  “Indian-ness”, I spent many years of my life thinking that my culture,  my family and my own identity were inferior to White culture, White  families, and my White peers. As a Brown person, I have been guilty of  upholding the system of White supremacy but I’ve come to realize that my  complicity and white adjacency were due to the invisible omnipresence  of whiteness that surrounded me.

In  my seventeen years of working as a diversity practitioner, I’ve had to  spend an incredible amount of time unlearning and unpacking the  whiteness that I consumed in the first half of my life. In doing so,  I’ve also had to revisit my experiences while simultaneously  acknowledging that I enter the conversation about race and racism from a  place of racial privilege. My antiracism journey as a South Asian  American has been complex, insightful, and painful.

Although it can be emotionally exhausting to revisit my personal experiences, telling my story to bring forth awareness about the complexity of  racism, holds a silver lining. Though my experiences of racism have left  scars, they’ve also made me a stronger person. In fact, many of my early racist experiences helped me to prepare for the onset of racially oppressive realities I would endure as an adult, both in professional and personal contexts. However, unlike systemic racism that many  communities of color in the U.S face, the interpersonal racism I’ve endured hasn’t physically killed me or denied me opportunities of upward  mobility. While I’ve been unsurprised by most of the racism I’ve  experienced as an adult, twelve years ago, I experienced one incident  that was painfully debilitating.

This  racist incident happened at the wedding of one of my (at that time)  closest and dearest friends. She was someone I had known for over a decade and had become like family. We were close, so much so that I was a  bridesmaid at her wedding. It was during her wedding reception that one  of her guests made it a point to frequently walk past the head table  where I and the other members of the bridal party were seated. He would  walk by our table to harass me by saying “Cindu the Hindu”, “Sand  Nigger”, and “Go Back to your Country.” This was not a random act of  hate. This was a racist perpetrator I knew. This was Jeff.

Jeff  and I attended the same high school and even happened to be social  acquaintances for a brief period during my college years. In high  school, Jeff never missed an opportunity to call me “Cindu the Hindu.”  In college, he continued with this badgering on occasion when we were in  the same social setting but did so “jokingly” to make his overt racism  more palatable for others in the room.

It  had been a decade since I had last seen Jeff but he was still reveling  in his use of racial slurs against me. Now, at almost thirty years old, I  saw he hadn’t changed much since his days of being a racist high-school  kid. While I wasn’t shocked by his words, I remember feeling confused  as to why he would harass me with these words during his own cousin’s  wedding.

Jeff continued berating  me throughout the night as he and his brother, whom I never met before  that night, became increasingly intoxicated. The name calling didn’t  bother me as much as it bothered my friends and my husband, who were  shocked to witness such blatant racism. As the slurs continued,  confrontation escalated. I encouraged everyone to ignore what was  happening because I didn’t want this incident to ruin my friend’s  wedding day.

At this point in my  life, I had been so conditioned to accept racism that the slurs and name  calling didn’t hurt me nearly as much as it hurt those around me. My  husband could not ignore what he was witnessing. He approached the  brothers and asked them to leave me alone. Despite my husband’s request,  I continued to be harrassed, being called “Sand-Nigger” and told to “Go  back to my country.” My husband eventually lost his cool and got into  Jeff’s face, demanding they stop their behavior at which point my  friends quickly pulled my husband back before the conflict could become  physical. The bartenders working the wedding took note of the conflict  and were so appalled by the racist language that they then refused to  serve Jeff and his brother. While my husband’s demand didn’t seem to  phase Jeff, once the bartenders refused to serve them, Jeff, his brother  and their wives decided to leave the reception early.

I  felt a sense of relief watching the scene deescalate. While my friends  were calming my husband down at the back of the reception hall my friend  Claudia and I went outside to get some fresh air. Just when I felt  confident that the worst of the night was behind me, the unthinkable  happened.

As Jeff, his brother  and their wives were leaving the reception, Jeff’s brother approached me  closing in on my face to say “I’m going to find out where you live and  kill your fucking husband.” Up until this point of the night I had  stayed calm, but when Jeff’s brother threatened my husband’s life, I  lost my cool. I began yelling every profanity I could think of at them  when suddenly Joe’s brother grabbed me by the arms and threw me to the  ground. My friend Claudia tried to defend me when Jeff’s brother  abruptly grabbed her by the neck in a choke-hold, lifting her off her  feet, before throwing her to the ground next to me. When Jeff, his  brother, and their wives realized what they had done, they fled the  scene.

What started with racist  remarks ended with physical violence, leaving me with a ripped  bridesmaid’s dress and Claudia with a bruise on her neck from the  choke-hold. To say I was mortified would be an understatement. I was in  shock and it was hard to comprehend what had happened. The pain I felt  from being thrown to the ground was nothing compared to the pain I  experienced seeing the parents of the bride, Jeff’s mother — who I knew  very well, along with dozens of bystanders, sit back and watch Claudia  and I get physically assaulted. Not a single bystander took action to  stop the violence. It was a friend who witnessed the tail end of the  incident who frantically called the police. What hurt the most was that  not a single person came over to ask us if we were okay.

Soon  after, the police arrived and informed us that because the wedding was  being held on a college campus, the wedding would be shut down if a  report was filed. Moments later, the groom approached me accusing me of  “race baiting” saying “you better not fucking ruin this wedding.” I felt  conflicted, but due to my love and loyalty to the bride, I opted out of  making a report. Instead, I went to the bar and took a shot of tequila  to numb my pain. Putting my game face on, I went back to the wedding  reception smiling and dancing the night away trying to un-remember what I  had just experienced. I did what I thought any good friend would do,  which I now deeply regret.

The  heartache I felt when I awoke the next morning is one that is  indescribable. It was, and still is, a pain that I have only experienced  one other time in my life after a close friend of mine died  unexpectedly at the age of twenty-eight. This excruciating pain didn’t  come from the racist name calling. It didn’t even come from the physical  violence that Claudia or I endured. It came from realizing that these  White people whom I genuinely loved and cared for, stood by and watched  me get physically assaulted without even asking if I was okay. It was  from the groom accusing me of race baiting and blaming me for the racism  I experienced at his wedding instead of apologizing for what happened.

The  wounds of my pain grew deeper when I didn’t hear from the bride herself  after she knew what occurred. The bride didn’t return my calls for over  a month and then blamed me for the fact her wedding guests were talking  about this incident of racism instead of wedding details she spent an  entire year planning. It was as if she was rubbing salt into my deep  wounds. My friends who witnessed the events of that horrific night went  out of their way to explain I had no part in instigating the racism and  violence. However, regardless of their efforts, it was clear that me  being an “angry, Brown, diversity educator who enjoyed race-baiting” was  the narrative that would stick.

I  spent at least a year after the wedding in a daze of sadness and  depression. My mind was consumed with what I had experienced. I spent  countless hours replaying the incidents, questioning if I indeed had  done something to instigate the violence. I questioned if I was to blame  for losing the relationship of one of my closest and most dearest  friends. The incident I endured at this wedding was triggering and  caused me to relive some of my childhood racial trauma, but it also  created new trauma, one that I carry with me to this day. This incident  re-awoke my racial consciousness and made me aware of something I had  been blind to as the “token” Brown person in the room. For the first  time since childhood, I was reminded that as a person of color I was not  always welcomed or safe in the predominately White spaces I operated  in.

For years after the wedding, I was hyper aware when I was the only person of color in the room,  whether it was a Chicago street festival that was happening in a White neighborhood, a gathering with my White girlfriends, or a meeting with  the White executive leadership of my college. In these situations, I  experienced an uncomfortable feeling in my gut, a feeling that I hadn’t  experienced since I was bullied during my school aged days. I’ve spent  the past twelve years trying to disrupt this feeling that happens when I  am the “only” in the room and trying to remember that just because I  experienced racism at the hands of White people, not all White people  are the same. Not all White people are intentionally racist and there is no benefit that comes from me harboring racial bias or hate towards every White person I come across.

Due to my past racist experiences, I cannot deny that I do often feel myself walking on shards of broken glass when I am in the process of building a trusting and close relationship with a White person. I know however, that if I stereotype every White person that comes into my life to be the same vile, hateful, and ignorant person as Jeff, I am contributing to the racial divides that plague our country.

Audre  Lorde once stated, “for the master’s tools will never dismantle the  master’s house.” Instead of using my oppressive experiences of hate to  justify hating others, I’ve chosen to use my experiences to create  awareness about the pervasiveness of racism that ravages our society. I  use my experiences to encourage others to engage in cross racial  allyship and cultivate a racially inclusive society in which all of us  truly belong.

I share my story  not because I want your pity, but because it is important to know that  racism happens to ordinary folks like myself. It is through personal stories that we can better understand the complexity of racism and the  ways it manifests. I’ve tried writing about this experience many times  in the last several years, but I could never bring myself to recount  this experience with more than just a few sentences at a time. It was  agonizing. It still is. However, I realize now, when I am willing to get  comfortable with being uncomfortable and share my painful personal  stories with others, I receive the valuable reward of continued  self-growth and healing.

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