290x230-complexion-obsession

I’m in Singapore with a friend of mine – a 38-year-old Philippino man. Yesterday we decided to go shopping in a vast shopping area called Orchard Road. This road reflects a variety of different people, cultures, foods, and countries. On one street you could bump into Indians, Malaysians, Singaporeans, Chinese, Japanese, English, and Tamils.

We decide to go shopping in one of the many malls.  I needed some toothpaste so went into a sort of chemist / make up / toiletries shop run by Philippino women.

As I browsed the shop we noticed everything – body lotions, face creams, face washes, hair removers, even toilet roll – had skin whitening ingredients in them.  I’ve been to India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Thailand and seen this kind of thing before. But this ridiculous psychological pressure on women (as all the products in this shop were specifically for women) has reached new heights.

Shelves were stacked with armpit and bikini lightening cream. What man desires his woman to have some areas whiter than the rest of her body, so much that they might not even match her face or legs? And what man is checking the armpit of a woman on the first date?

If there are women out there with dark faces and white armpits, someone out there doesn’t look quite right.

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-Photo by author

I picked up some toothpaste, which of course had whitening agents in, and as I went to pay, there was a whole shelf full of ‘Virginity Soap’.

My friend and I started laughing and taking photos. Then I decided to buy a bar to take back to England to show my friends – who I know would never believe me if I told them about it. The shop was full of Asian women, as I went to the till; one of the women held up the soap and said, “This is great. Cut it in half. Save half and use half and it will tighten everything up”. Five other women stood behind me in the queue all joining in to say, “It’s great, it will make you feel like a new woman”

I told her it was just a souvenir and that I wouldn’t be using it at all. She said, “Don’t be ashamed, your husband will be very pleased and he won’t cheat on you”.

“Is that why you use it?” I said.

“Yes. I do it partly for my husband and partly for me.”

This obsession with Eastern women feeling the pressure to be white and tight has gone too far. I noticed there were no products in this shop for tightening up men’s parts which is a shame because many male cyclists around London could do with some extra help.

Here in the west, my English friends are happy being dark and loose, and would never waste their money trying to become whiter and tight.

It’s a class, power, colonial and self esteem issue. The idea that if you’re white you have money, class, power, a better chance of a better class of husband and therefore, a better life. Traditionally people from lower castes were poorer people who worked in the fields and never married out of their castes, so produced generations of dark skinned children who struggled for progress. As time goes on, and people become better educated, this must change.

Women are destroying their beautiful bodies in an attempt to get lighter skin and tighter parts. Advertising is a huge problem, and in places like India and Pakistan, darker women need to be featured more in ad campaigns and magazines, but the self esteem of a nation must grow. Dark skinned women need to know that they are just as beautiful as light skinned. This extends to all parts of the world; I’ve noticed Beyoncé is turning more Michael Jackson by the day.

As we walked out of the shop we saw an Asian woman with a white face and black hair. My friend pointed her out to me and said, “Now she’s gone too far”. She was like a slightly tanned Father Christmas; it didn’t look right or attractive.

Someone tell these women, people in the west are dying to have their tanned skin and they are beautiful just the way they are.

 


Shazia-Mirza-80

The author is an award winning stand-up comedian and writer. She has performed all over the world. A columnist for The Guardian UK, she was named Columnist of the Year at the prestigious PPA Awards. Find out more from her website.

 


The views expressed by this blogger and in the following reader comments do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Dawn Media Group.

Shazia Mirza is an award winning stand-up comedian and writer. She has performed all over the world. A columnist for The Guardian UK, she was named Columnist of the Year at the prestigious PPA Awards.

The views expressed by this blogger and in the following reader comments do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Dawn Media Group.


Comments are closed.

Comments (41)

Usman Chaudhry
November 5, 2012 2:39 pm
Does she really care for how she looks? I doubt so, so do her words. Objectivity and actions should be someones identity. All in all beauty needs to be praised whether on white/dark skin or under the skin.
Truth teller
November 5, 2012 12:30 pm
I don't know about whiter but everybody wants tighter
GLuke
November 5, 2012 9:06 am
Its not an east or west issue. The beauty industry globally thrives on making people feel insecure about their looks and trying to get them to change how they look. So fair skinned people in the west spend hours in the sun tanning themselves (and possibly getting skin cancer in the process). For those who dont have the time to go to the beach can spray on a tan or, more disturbingly, go to a tanning saloon and get yourself baked in a short period of time (significantly increasing the risk of skin cancer). All this exposure to the sun also make the skin age prematurely, but even that is an acceptable price to pay just to look darker. In the east, darker people are at the same time busy slapping on whitening creams. I dont see any of this changing as that would hit the global beauty industry hard and they will continue to spend on advertising to feed the insecurity.
drzahidpervez
November 5, 2012 7:49 am
subcontinent women are responsible for this white girl mania...
Ameer Hamzah
November 5, 2012 6:58 am
Goray rung kaa zamana kabhi ho gaa na purana, Gori dar tujhey kis kaa hey, tera toe rung gora hey, hai tera toe rung gora hey. :)
Atif
November 5, 2012 4:49 am
Oh this is part of a long list of cultural myths that south asia thrives on. But on the "brighter side": Thank goodness the plastic surgery obsession of Lebanon hasnt reached the sub continent YET!
suresh
November 5, 2012 4:18 am
Shazia, a great fan, you make my day happyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy.
rahul
November 4, 2012 9:23 pm
Greatest one liner on this topic !!, Bravo my man
Rattan(Sydney)
November 4, 2012 6:41 pm
Dear Shazia, please cahnge your pic.you look like a "Tiri"which you are hopefully not.You are winking with a Microphone in hand --- hmmm not a good look let me tell you.
Neer Nayan
November 4, 2012 5:47 pm
KHUDA bhi, aasmaan se, jab zameen per Dekhata hoga.. "Is wahayaat nasl e insaan ko maine kyun banaya.." Sochata hoga..
BEA
November 4, 2012 3:53 pm
White people in the west and USA spend a fortune on spray tans and self tanning products the highest rate of Skin Cancer is in male/females in Europe they spend hrs roasring in the sun because they do want to be white. on the other hand the Dark Skinned people do not want to be dark, If you are good honest person in your heart it does not matter what color your skin is
Tamilslevan
November 4, 2012 11:47 am
If it is so, why do most of the interracial marriages in the world is between white women and black men. So the opposite is true!
nadeem
November 4, 2012 9:53 am
excellent write up!!!!
Ghalib Khan
November 4, 2012 5:16 am
According to me the most important thing should be your health, A good health reflects on your face and body and does make you look attractive. Second most important thing is how you dress, I read somewhere written from a photographer, that if you have hole in your socks it reflects on your face.
rajesh
November 4, 2012 1:49 am
@guest - I am from south India too. Clearly you need to spend more time with ppl around you to understand their desires. you could also look at the bride wanted ads in the papers.
Aamir
November 4, 2012 1:18 am
I have read a few of your articles and they are lively, funny and about problems in the mindsets.. it would take a while to change that. Keep up with the good work. Thanks
Aamir
November 4, 2012 1:16 am
Ads dont make mindsets, ads thrive on mindsets.. change the mindsets and ads would go on their own.
Jonathan
November 4, 2012 1:02 am
While you are engaged in changing the worlds ideas of Beauty, try also promoting models who are women of character and grace. What do they look like? It's all too well known how poor the characters of many of todays "models" are.
Truth
November 4, 2012 12:15 am
I guess you are telling women, "lighten and tighten, or loosen and lose 'em."
Siva
November 3, 2012 11:24 pm
Well, why are fair skinned people are heros or heroins and dark colored once as villains or evil, in your south indian movies. Color craze is more prevalant in south than rest of India
Aiden
November 3, 2012 11:24 pm
As a very fair skinned person of Irish origin I'd like to say I'd trade my complexion for a darker one in a second. I don't consider pale white attractive at all. I can't even be in the sun for more than twenty minutes before getting burned. I have male and female co workers of Indian origin and I don't look at them any different. I was aghast when a male co worker lined up pictures of potential wives and was using a skin color chart to exempt those with an undesirable skin shade. Truly the British empire has ruined people's perceptions of themselves.
BEA
November 3, 2012 10:29 pm
I do not see this obsession with white skins it dose not look healthy i myself have fair skin and i hate it i have regular spay tans to give me some colour i cannot remember the last time i saw the real colour of my skin. it all also comes from culture in India and Pakistan they think if parents find a fair skinned bride for their sons they will be lucky white skin can have a black heart, TV and Films do have a lot to answer as well, and the western culture, How beautiful is Rekha and Rani they are not fair girls, and also beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Amir Iftikhar Warraich
November 3, 2012 9:56 pm
In northern Europe women spend billions getting a darker Jay-lo looking tan. The cultural perception is that a tanned skin tone is healtier and better. Guess the global average skin tone is the mediterrean one which everyone is finally going to end up looking alike.
namenaveen
November 3, 2012 8:35 pm
very well said- fairer skin people are considered to be beautiful in india/pakistan- may be its inferiority complex created y yrs of white coloniasm
Cyrus Howell
November 3, 2012 7:32 pm
It is not a problem in the West. Prejudice is not about skin color, but about bad habits. Women dress for other women. The egos of the women are the problem. White men often like darker women.
Cyrus Howell
November 3, 2012 7:26 pm
" On one street you could bump into Indians, Malaysians, Singaporeans, Chinese, Japanese, English, and Tamils... . ...and Australians and Indonesians.
ss
November 3, 2012 6:30 pm
i am act. shocked to see that u mention indians and tamils as two different entities.i am a tamilian but indian too ...plzz have some knowledge before posting any of this.
NASAH (USA)
November 3, 2012 4:58 pm
Then who will sell the whitening soaps and lotions?
sarah
November 3, 2012 4:20 pm
Agree, same its true in China. Face whitening creams crowd out any other in the supermarkets. Advertisements show chinese noses pointed and upturned and faces white .
guest
November 3, 2012 3:57 pm
I am from south India and in this part of the country, both men and women are duskier, darker, darkest and we have absolutely no problems with that. In fact, academically well-accomplished girls or well employed girls are preferred for life-partners over the so-called fair-complexioned girls if they are not faring well enough. Education and employment capability are the first and main criteria here whether you are a man or a woman. Whiter complexion could be an added bonus that's all. Interestingly, south Indian women have most successful careers, highest levels of education in the country. Indira Nooyi CEO of world Pepsico is a tamil. Our pictures have duskiest heroines and heroes in the entire subcontinent but are run-away hits in South Asian populated countries and middle-east. Btw Tamils and Indians are not 2 separate entities; we are Indians first and Tamils next. Probably its a mixing up with Sri Lankan tamils. But the sale of fairness creams is relentless throughout India. In the south, mainly its used as a sunscreen as we have harshest and longest summers. One more thing: most use a fairness cream like a foundation here, nothing more. About your English friends not wanting to look whiter, why should they?! When it comes to Malay and Chinese women, its also a well known fact here how much most of them care for empty vanity. You have to spend more time with Malays, Chinese, Thai and Indonesian and Filipino women to understand the difference between their mindset and that of south Indian women.
reality not selected truth
November 3, 2012 3:56 pm
Every country has their own obsessions concerning beauty. Its more fun to go around a bit and stay some months in different countries. In the end you come to one conclusion everything is beautiful just feel it.
Vasan
November 3, 2012 2:58 pm
Shazia, It is not just the white skin for which the women aspire. It is also the way they talk, walk, facial expressions and everything that goes to make a woman attractive in the USA. I agree with you that this is sad and I hope they get wise. But why don;t you start with yourself if you want to advise others? Is the color of your skin as light as it appears in the photo? And why do you have an expression that is so 'white'? Pakistani women don't wink like that, surely? Everything in that photo screams 'whiteness'! Please do advise others not to be obsessed with whiteness, I completely agree with you, but why don't you start with your own photo before getting up to advise other women?
sdf
November 3, 2012 2:39 pm
Typical response. When faced someone says "______ is a problem in Pakistan, it should be fixed", respond with "________ is a problem in the West; why don't they fix that first". Fill in the blanks with whatever you please.
Sam
November 3, 2012 2:17 pm
it is true that women want to look whiter, but it is due to real reason , the society like it that way. No doubt it is a pity. The meda is responsible for this. Just see any TV drama ( of India ) The house owner will be whitish and the servant will be dark complextioned. Will the people in higher strata change first ?
roger
November 3, 2012 1:43 pm
Might is Right, but White is Tight Roger
Mahrukh Azhar Khan
November 3, 2012 1:25 pm
Excellent article!
ahsan
November 3, 2012 1:19 pm
"As we walked out of the shop we saw an Asian woman with a white face and black hair. My friend pointed her out to me and said, “Now she’s gone too far”. She was like a slightly tanned Father Christmas; it didn’t look right or attractive" In my opinion you are being judgemental on notions of beauty and hence part of the crowd. I am sure that you too, like so many goris and desi goris like you, are obsessed with being a "size zero". The west should feature more natural looking curvy women in their ads. Being white is not unhealthy but being an ultra thin, "size zero" is very unhealthy. So this insecurity in endemic in women the world over.
roger
November 3, 2012 1:18 pm
This one is funny, Shazia. Anyway and coincidentally, I was in Singapore last week, as well. There is a serious problem with the Chinese in Singapore and Malaysia to be whiter than the whites. The malady is so acute that they also believe that white is 'truth', and the dark color of people equates to them being 'liars' !!! The flip side of being white to these people is the ability of being able to speak 'good' English. It is not communication anymore. It is the sheer snobbery of being white. Roger
talha
November 3, 2012 1:13 pm
Women should not be in ad campaigns or on tv. Period. USING women (and even men) for their physical appearance makes them a commodity. Think of it as a lesser form of prostitution (but likely more devastating to society in magnitude). This disrupts the social structure and the effects on the person's own psyche are unquestionable.
Mohsin
November 3, 2012 12:52 pm
Doesn't make-up fall into the same category???
wally walter
November 3, 2012 12:50 pm
One of the best blogs I have read in recent times ! Keep it up. I dont need to spill my broken English and destroy the charm of this page :)