Author called 'damned Paki'
2007-01-19 20:26
New Delhi - Indian-born Man Booker Prize winner Kiran Desai jumped into the fray on Friday over racist bullying in Britain, saying she has been called a "damned Paki" in the country.
Desai, who won the 2006 British award for her novel The Inheritance of Loss said the storm over alleged racism against Indian actress Shilpa Shetty in a British TV reality show highlighted problems Asians face in the West.
"I certainly have been walking the streets of London and elsewhere in England and people have said 'Go back to where you come from' or, you know, "You damned Paki,'" US-based Desai told Times Now private television network.
"I don't know a single Indian to whom it has not happened.
"Anyone dark-skinned, basically from another part of the world, faces this in the West and I think people don't like to admit it because of this worry you will become what you are called.
"That's how racism operates and that is how they get you ... it destroys your confidence and your dignity immediately," the novelist said.
The issue of racism in Britain
The 35-year-old novelist beat five other authors, including favorite Sarah Waters and her book The Night Watch to become the youngest-ever woman to win the £50 000 (R705 430) award last year.
Desai said the verbal attacks on Shetty by the Bollywood actress's fellow contestants in the Celebrity Big Brother show would promote dialogue about the issue of racism in Britain.
"People need to be talking about it a lot more in countries like Britain," she told the TV station.
Shetty has been taunted on the show for her accent, labelled a "dog" and asked whether she lives in a shack.
'There's a bedrock from which this comes'
The insults have prompted protestors in India to burn effigies of the Channel Four show's producers.
"There is a feeling in Britain that this is not much and it's an isolated incident but I don't think that these are isolated incidents," she said.
"I think there is a bedrock from which all this comes."