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Friday, 22 February 2013

BBC News: India's unbearable lightness of being by Shantanu Guha Ray


Indian woman receiving skin lightening treatment
Having lighter skin is considered an asset in parts of India

It is being called "Snow White syndrome" in India, a market where sales of whitening creams are far outstripping those of Coca-Cola and tea.
India also has the world's second most lucrative marriage industry - the first being neighbouring China - that has grown to a whopping $40bn a year spent on weddings, dowries, jewellery etc.
And demand for fair-complexioned brides and grooms to grace these occasions is as high as ever
Fuelling this demand are the country's 75-odd reality TV shows where being fair, lovely and handsome means instant stardom.
As a result, the Indian whitening cream market is expanding at a rate of nearly 18% a year. The country's largest research agency, AC Nielsen, estimates that figure will rise to about 25% this year - and the market will be worth an estimated $432m, an all-time high.
With the Indian middle class expected to increase 10-fold to 583 million people by 2025, it looks as if things will only get better for the cream makers.
But there have been questions by medical experts about the effect of these creams on the skin.
Brand ambassador
The implicit assumption by many is this: the whiter the skin, the more attractive you are.
Fair and Handsome cream
India's skin-lightening cream industry gets ever more lucrative
John Abraham, a top Indian actor and model, says: "Indian men want to look better."
And he should know. The market is booming like never before. Launched way back in 1978, Hindustan Unilever's Fair & Lovely is the leader in women's lightening skincare, while Calcutta's Emami group leads the male equivalent with its brand, Fair And Handsome.
The company calls this brand - launched in 2005 - the world's number one fairness cream.
It achieved sales of $13m in 2008-09 and has Shah Rukh Khan, another Bollywood superstar, as its brand ambassador.
And then there are female stars endorsing similar products. Katrina Kaif, naturally fair, sells Olay's Natural White while Deepika Padukone sells Neutrogena's Fine Fairness range.
Sonam Kapoor sells L'Oreal's White Perfect while Preity Zinta, once a top star, endorsed Fem's Herbal Bleach.
 If you apply anything on the skin, there will obviously be side effects 
Rues VK Sharma, All India Institute of Medical Sciences
And there are many brands on the shelves to choose from: lightening, brightening, clearing, whitening, anti-pigmentation, freshening, anti-dullness and even illuminating.
"India is on a fairness hook, everyone wants to look fair," says Mohan Goenka, director of the Calcutta-based Emami group, whose Fair and Handsome brand for men was the first of its kind in the market.
A recent study by Hindustan Unilever showed how men in southern states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka are fervent purchasers of whitening creams.
For example, Tamil Nadu has been recording - for the past year - the highest number of sales for Narayanan, a skin-whitening cream from the Unilever stable.
Another report in the daily Economic Times says sales of skin-whitening cosmetic products were also high in tribal-dominated states like Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh.
"The market in India is huge, really huge," says a Procter & Gamble spokesman.
Experts say that demand has boomed because of the tendency to discriminate against a person's skin colour, a practice that is still widespread across rural India.
Steroids
"But if your complexion is fair, you avoid that pinch. Everyone in India wants to be fairer. At times it is repulsive, worse than chalking of geishas' faces in Japan, but everyone wants to have a jar or tube of skin-whitening cream," says fashion designer Rohit Bal, who has dressed Bollywood actresses and visited the sets of reality shows.
Woman receiving skin lightening treatment
Demand for fair complexioned brides and grooms is at a high
As a result, the products - priced between 50 cents and $150 a jar/tube - are in great demand countrywide.
No study has ever been done to discover what "fairness in four weeks" achieves.
Worse, there are several controversies attached to such products.
"If you apply anything on the skin, there will obviously be side effects," says Rues VK Sharma, head of the dermatology department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences.
"Very few know that many of these creams contain steroids. Whatever doctors say will always be a drop in the ocean, as advertisements flooding the market have a far larger impact on the minds of people."
But companies say otherwise.
"We are not selling steroids and to date the company has not been involved in a single lawsuit where someone has blamed us for messing up their skin. Our products are lab-tested and we vouch for it," says Mohan Goenka of the Emami group.

URL: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8546183.stm

Wednesday, 20 February 2013

I AM ME: Shubhankar Mehrotra



आयने से मैंने पूछा,

बता सबसे सुंदर कौन ?

पलतकर उसने कहा...

"खुद मे झांक कर देख पगली,

कयों पूछती हे यह सवाल

जब सबसे सुंदर चेहरा खुद ही पाया ।

तो कया हुआ जो रंग तेरा सांवला,

था तो वो मुरली मनोहर भी काला ।"

Sunday, 17 February 2013

TOI: Cross-region marriages: Tale of dark skinned brides by Sukhbir Siwach


CHANDIGARH: The dark-skinned brides in cross-region marriages are not taken to attend local festivals or weddings due to discrimination based on colour in Haryana and Rajasthan, indicated a new study. Post-marriage, their (brides) dark hue appears to impede their acceptance into conjugal communities, according to a study 'Tied in a Knot - cross-region marriages in Haryana and Rajasthan, Implications for Gender Rights and Gender Relations,' funded by the Royal Norwegian Embassy.

The research was conducted in Rohtak, Rewari and Mewat district of Haryana and Alwar and Jhunjhunu district of Rajasthan. "Locals prefer not to take dark-skinned brides brought from different states to urban markets for shopping apart from avoiding them to accompany to attend festivals and weddings. On insisting to accompany, her husband or in-laws tell such women to feel privileged stating they were married despite being dark-skinned," said author of the study, Reena Kukreja, an Indian researcher-cum-film maker based in Canada while speaking to the Times of India on Thursday. During the study, the author has interviewed few dark-skinned cross-region brides married in Rohtak district on exclusions faced due to their skin tone. "The fact is that women here are fair skinned whilst I am darker. They don't like me. When they'd come to Maharashtra for marriage, they didn't consider the skin tone-whether a dark skinned woman would fit the bill. Now, they think about what their relatives might comment. If there is a festival, wedding or any function within the family, I am not taken anywhere. Not to any wedding. Nowhere! Perhaps they think that I might appear as a misfit in their family. All the women will be fair skinned whilst I'll be dark. I'll stand out. Perhaps, that's what they think. I have never been taken anywhere. For instance, there was a marriage in Rohtak-I wasn't taken there at all. Or even when a marriage was here in the village, nor there either," a bride told the author. Another bride said, "My maternal uncle said, 'we'll have to marry her there (Haryana) as she's dark complexioned. People here will demand huge dowry for her.' So, I was married here. My younger sister is fairer than me, I am dark skinned. People demand high dowry for dark skinned women. I couldn't get married in Maharashtra as the dowry demand was huge. My younger sister is married there whilst I am separated from everyone, my family and relatives."

The author has quoted, a group of Rohtak residents as saying, "The women being brought in from there: they are short in height. Due to harsh summers there, they are also dark-complexioned. People here are light skinned. Obviously, the 'breed' will get impacted as the colour will be different and the height less." "Most Haryanvi men we interviewed, stated explicitly that if they had an option, they would have preferred a fair skinned bride, preferable drawn from the neighbouring region of Himachal Pradesh.....dark complexioned women from East India or Maharashtra are their least preferred choice," mentioned the study.