Manushi Chhillar has won the Miss World competition for 2017, India's first win after 17 years
And
another 'India's daughter' is born. A country that in recent times has
needed no particular reason to come together to abuse or criticise a
chosen few is for once rejoicing. After all, 17 years is a long time.
Our currency has new shades, the definition of those defying
"nationalism" is even more colourful and Priyanka Chopra has presented
at the Oscars. The win by 20- year old Manushi Chhillar had politicians
congratulating the Haryana girl fastest fingers first on Twitter. For a
state that only recently managed to dilute its image of honour killing
and female infanticide by giving us champion wrestlers, this win is now
being predictably capitalised politically. "Beti Padhao, Beti Bachao"
began three years ago, yet, in some new version of back to the future, a
state minister has credited it for the unsuspecting winner's success.
The
Prime Minister who has been silent on the health emergency as areas of
North India were shrouded in smog in the last couple of weeks proved
many of us right. By immediately tweeting his congratulations, he
demonstrated that as the head of the country, even pleas of young
children against the shaving off of years of their lives by breathing an
acrid air more than 10 times acceptable limits cannot sway him, if he
doesn't want it to.
Manushi Chhillar is the 6th Indian woman to bring home the Miss World crown
BJP
president Amit Shah was not far behind, lovingly calling Chhillar
"daughter of India", but such is the nature of our selective praise that
one daughter today is more equal than the other. Actress Deepika
Padukone has been threatened with physical harm in the last few days for
portraying a role in a movie that no one can say is anything but
fictional, yet, it's a sign of our times that we continue to empower our
fringe by looking away as they threaten violence even to women. The
Karni Sena says that while it has never raised its hand against a woman,
if need be, it will do to Deepika what Lakshman did to Shrupnakha for
violating the culture of India. The irony is lost because this is the
new norm, to simply look away when things get uncomfortable.
Barring
Shabana Azmi and Deepika herself, who has questioned how long people
like these will be allowed to get away, there is an easy calm. It would
be foolish of us to expect Bollywood to take a stand on anything when it
can't even defend its own. Anupam Kher who is so vocal on lessons on
patriotism is also silent; his teaching, it seems, don't extend to
respecting women. The only politician who spoke was Subramanian Swamy,
but it would have been preferable if he hadn't. Social media seems to
have almost convinced him that the actress is Dutch, thereby losing any
moral right to question the protests against Padmavati. For the
initiated, the actress was born in Copenhagen and her father, the
legendary Prakash Padukone, was one of the first to fill us with real
patriotic pride when the tricolor was raised after his victory at the
All England Championships.
So the Miss World crown has fallen into
our lap and filled our collective chests with pride. Away from any
controversy or politics, this young lady has won our hearts in the way
of out cultural imperialism of the 90s, a time when liberalisation
coincided with India winning as many titles as there were beauty queens.
Those days, we could do or say no wrong even when Priyanka Chopra in
the year 2000 replied that Mother Teresa was the most successful woman
living. Mother Teresa had passed away three years earlier but the
pageant in London was reportedly sponsored by an Indian network which is
why Mother had to be invoked, I assume.
Perhaps by then our
answers on world peace, compassion and helping the downtrodden had
started becoming stale or maybe the market for those had already been
tapped. Beauty, fashion and cosmetics had become a household name far
removed from the days of the solitary Ponds' cream advertisements that
tried to sizzle over our television screens.
Slowly, just like in
the West, even for us, the beauty with brains novelty wore off and
celebrating beauty queens receded as a national hobby. Yet, behind the
scenes, it remains an instant path to stardom. There are horror stories,
cut throat competition but those remain hearsay. It is understood once a
beauty queen, next a Bollywood star (the promise to change the world
disappears even faster than the first movie is signed). Only the first
winner, Reita Faria, bucked the trend, refusing Bollywood offers and
going on to becoming a doctor.
Indian and Venezuela have 6 winners
each but in the South American country this is an industry that expects
results. Just like in China, girls barely in their teens are pursuing
the beauty crown ambition. Venezuela, where almost every woman is
believed to have got at least one body job, has co-incidentally also
seen a massive boom in the plastic surgery business, even banks offer
loans for such surgeries and perhaps their most telling slogan is "have
your plastic on our plastic"!
Cosmetic beauty though has also been
an intrinsic part of our culture, we have been perpetuating the
stereotype for decades with advertisements of fairness creams on the
front pages of many newspapers. We will probably see more of these now
because Manushi's win doesn't make us uncomfortable, the new Miss World
in keeping with past trends is likely to keep it diplomatic and not
question the direction our nation is taking like Deepika Padukone has
recently.
So, let's also treat it for what it is. A beauty pageant nothing more, nothing less.
Courtesy : NDTV