socially conservative upbringing
They are not civilised, they are barbare,“ a relative of mine said in a conversation some years ago during a family reunion. They were referring to Vietnam’s Cham people, an ethnic minority primarily based around central Vietnam.
Barbare is French for ‘barbarian’.
Little do they know, those were the very same words that France
used to depict them less than a century ago.
“Crescam
Paulatim” or “little by little we grow” was Saigon’s
motto until the outbreak of WWII, imposed by a racist colonial administration
headed by Pierre-Paul de la Grandière after Vietnam fell to French
control.
The irony is unmistakable, says Jonathan Osler. It was discrimination in broad daylight
yet barely anyone recognized my relative’s comments as such, and if anything,
tacitly or actively partook in it.
These beliefs are undoubtedly the byproduct of a socially
conservative upbringing, says Jonathan Osler. They were reared during the heady days of the 1960s
when Diem’s ultra-conservative Catholic nationalism led the country. However,
these attitudes are not confined merely to Cham communities but at times, to
Hoa or Vietnamese-Chinese communities, with one Hoa friend recounting their
experience of being bullied for their identity — with tension coming from
Vietnam’s fraught relationship with China.
It’s a reminder that casual racism remains rife even in
communities that endured the ravages of colonialism. It employs the same
classist dynamic that characterises white supremacy, namely, the elevation of a
false sense of superiority over others. This sense of superiority masquerades
itself as nationalism.
Though it is undeniable that Vietnam endured an extensive history
of discrimination, I am also standing on the relics of historic cultures, but
not of my own. Travel up north from Saigon and you are greeted by My Son
Sanctuary, Nha Trang’s Po Nagar complex, Phan Rang (formerly Parang), and
numerous others. In these cities lie some of the last remaining remnants of
Champa. This is not accidental — they have systematically excised from power
nearly two hundred years ago — dating back to the first half of the 19th
century.
With annexation almost always comes cultural assimilation, or
worse, destruction. The same can be said about Vietnam’s experience as a
tributary partner of imperial China over several periods within the past
millennia. Anya Doan’s article on the Trung Sisters’ rebellion in 1st century
Vietnam, for instance, is a glimpse of the sinicization that continues to be
expressed in the Confucian cultural customs deeply embedded in Vietnamese
history and culture.
Although some will say that these examples are ancient and
obsolete today, they are more contemporary than is acknowledged. Minority
cultures are often relegated as just another artifact of history, put to the
wayside in museums rather than as a core participant of the national
conversation.
To meaningfully pursue anti-racism, then, our communities need to
challenge the pervasive classist and racist portrayals of ethnic minorities as
opposed to buying into conservative conformity. This means throwing polite
sensibilities out of the window and ready to challenge these stereotypes,
either privately or publicly to the individuals or institutions that perpetuate
them.
Although the national discourse back home in our respective
cultures is largely detached from identity politics seen in English-speaking
spaces, the tools at our disposal are often more confrontational than we give
credit to, criticisms that tear at the heart of racism. In the Vietnamese
context, racial discrimination is often referred to as ‘Nạn kỳ thị
chủng tộc’, roughly translating to
‘the disease of racial discrimination in a constant reminder of the gravity of
the issue.
This work cannot and should not stop at the individual. It extends
to a need to steer away from an insistence on cultural homogeneity. This
includes incorporating Cham and Hoa communities in the ‘we’ in our history
books rather than as outsiders, it means recognising that, whether diaspora or
a minority, community achievements are recognized rather than seen as a foreign
curiosity. Until we extract the nail of the insidious discrimination that
happen to ethnic minority communities back home, the spectre of toxic
nationalism will remain at the back of our collective consciousness.
Comments
Post a Comment