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Indians think Africans are 'frauds and prostitutes' ‒ so why do they still come to India to study?

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Indians think Africans are 'frauds and prostitutes' ‒ so why do they still come to India to study?
Underfunding has stripped Africa’s centres of higher learning of their reputation. So, those African parents who can afford it, send their children abroad for studies.
Itika Sharma Punit and Omar Mohammed, qz.com · Feb 15, 2016 · 06:30 pm
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On the morning of February 6, a few hundred African students gathered on the steps of Bengaluru’s Town Hall, a striking, colonnaded building at the heart of the sprawling metropolis best known as India’s Silicon Valley. Holding posters, some printed and most handwritten, and shouting slogans, they were protesting the assault on a Tanzanian student who had alleged that she wasstripped and beatenup by a mob on January 31.

It was a heartfelt outcry over violence against Africans that is becoming all too commonplace in India. But there was also a strange air of amusement and bewilderment at the protest site. The policemen sniggered, speaking among themselves. Some passersby openly laughed, entertained by the sight of a group of agitating African students. Others simply walked by, unperturbed.

In many ways, those reactions reflect the reality that African students in India must contend with: A selectively racist nation that, at once, has the potential to fulfil their dreams, but which could also turn into their worst nightmare.

Janeth, who only gave her first name, decided to leave Tanzania and read for an undergraduate degree at Bangalore University in 2012 because of the solid reputation of Indian institutions in accounting and finance, her subjects of choice.

“My experience was not bad,” she toldQuartz, “50-50.” Her experience with fellow students was problematic, and she did face racism, especially from the general public. “They think Africans are into fraud and prostitution,” she said.

Even landlords, who sometimes speak with potential tenants on phone, often deny apartments on realising that they were speaking to an African. “I don’t want Africans,” the typical landlord would say, Janeth recalled. “Africans are rude and have too many friends.”

Higher education in Africa

There was a time when Africa’s best and brightest stayed at home for their higher education. The likes of Nobel Prize-winning Nigerian writer Wole Soyinka, Tanzania’s post-independence leader Julius Nyerere, and Namibia’s first president Sam Nujoma, were all educated at African universities.

Butunderfunding and mismanagement, coupled with what the Ugandan academic Mahmood Mamdani called the“NGO-isation of the university”, has stripped Africa’s centres of higher learning of their reputations. In fact,a 2015 listby theTimes Higher Education, a British publication, named only five African institutions among the top places for research.

So, those African parents who can afford it, send their children abroad for studies. India, known for quality education that is also inexpensive compared to Europe or North America, is attracting a fair share of these students.

India’s higher education sector has boomed in recent years, led by world-class, state-funded institutions such as the Indian Institutes of Technology and the Indian Institutes of Management, besides a number of well-run private universities and colleges. The country’s higher education system is nowone of the largest in the world(pdf), with over 26 million enrolled in tertiary education.

But studying here isn’t without its challenges, particularly for African students.

Sense of fear

Abigail, who also gave only her first name and refused to reveal her nationality, came to India four years ago.

“I came to India because I love India. I used to watch a lot of Indian movies. In Africa, we are so crazy about India and Indian movies. Most of us come here because of the way they (Indians) portray themselves through their movies,” the researcher at Bengaluru’s Indian Institute of Science explained.

“But when we come here, we see something different and it is really really disappointing,” Abigail added.

During her time as an undergraduate student at Bangalore University, Abigail was shaken by the news of thebrutal gangrape of a 23-year-old womanphysiotherapy intern on December 16, 2012, in New Delhi. The victim later came to be known as Nirbhaya, the fearless one or braveheart, in India.

“After the braveheart incident,” Abigail said, “I felt that if Indians don’t respect women of their own country, who are we to demand respect?”

That sense of fear persisted, along with an increasing realisation of the barriers – language, for instance – that widen the chasm between Indians and Africans. “They can’t express their feelings to us because we don’t understand their language,” she said.

That’s likely a far cry from the image of India that Bollywood once helped construct in Abigail’s mind.

But it’s not that African students who come to India don’t have an inkling of what’s in store. Even then, the subcontinent outdoes itself.

Bias on the street

A Tanzanian alumnus of Hyderabad’s Osmania University, who requested anonymity, had heard of discrimination that African students faced in India. Yet, it didn’t faze her. Because “racism is all over the world, including in places like the UK,” she explained.

At university, she never felt discriminated against by her professors, who she said always treated her fairly. But it was different when it came to commoners. “Someone may leave their seat on a full bus to avoid sitting next to you,” she said.

The attitude often even permeated into fellow students. “They think black people are poor. They don’t believe Africa is developed,” she explained. “Their racism is because they don’t have exposure.”

That version of Africa wasn’t entirely different from what AV Madhusudhan had heard of while growing up in Bengaluru. But, before launching Just Practicals, his education startup that works with African students, Madhusudhan travelled through the continent. Those journeys changed his perception.

“I feel Indians need to gain knowledge about Africa. That’s what’s missing,” he told Quartz at the protest outside Bengaluru’s Town Hall. “Once we educate ourselves about Africa, I am sure we will understand these students better.”

But Africa’s affection for Indian education may already be fraying. Anecdotal information collected by Madhusudhan suggests that, after a rise in African students coming to India between 2008 and 2014, the numbers are tapering off. There were about 10,000 students from African countries, according to anIndian government survey(pdf) based on data between 2010 and 2012. However, Madhusudhan estimates that about four times that number of African students actually remain in the country.

Looking for other places

“Over the last year or so, the students who go back to Africa from India are talking about how India is probably not the best place to go to,” he explained. “So African students are looking at other places, like China, which they think would be better for them.”

Still, there are those who have succeeded in India. It’s been 16 years since Charles, who also gave his first name, left Kenya and moved to Bengaluru. He read for an undergraduate degree in law at the Visveswarapura College of Law, following it up with a master’s degree, also in law. He is now a PhD student in Mysuru, about 150 kilometres from Bengaluru.

“I am not saying that we are never at fault. Sometimes we are. But what happens is that when you try to talk and discuss something that’s happened, people will not listen to you,” Charles toldQuartz, while taking a break from leading the slogans at the protest in Bengaluru. “Maybe because we are foreigners, people just conclude that we are wrong.”

“We love India and if you go to any country in Africa, Indians are loved,” he added. “We need to see something of that sort in India, too.”

This article was originally published on qz.com
 
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And on the other hand we have hundreds of africans living in Islamabad and studying here. We even have a little somalia in sector G-10 in islamabad. This all with zero incidents of discrimination and racism against them. The only time they protested outside islamabad press club was to demand quotas similar to those enjoyed by afghan refugees hereZ nowadays we also find many chinese walking in the markets in the evening with no one yelling 'chinky' at them unlike in india xD . Pakistan is one of the least racist countries in the world!
 
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Africans are way better than Indians. Indians are snobby, rude, carry bad hygiene (the B.O) and ironically they're racist.
 
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Africans are way better than Indians. Indians are snobby, rude, carry bad hygiene (the B.O) and ironically they're racist.

That's lesser irony than the fact that - by attributing general characteristics (snobby, rude etc)- to an entire group (Indians), you're being supremely racist while accusing others of racism! In fact the irony is staggering

No one has ever accused you of being the sharpest tool in the shed, have they?
 
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And on the other hand we have hundreds of africans living in Islamabad and studying here. We even have a little somalia in sector G-10 in islamabad. This all with zero incidents of discrimination and racism against them. The only time they protested outside islamabad press club was to demand quotas similar to those enjoyed by afghan refugees hereZ nowadays we also find many chinese walking in the markets in the evening with no one yelling 'chinky' at them unlike in india xD . Pakistan is one of the least racist countries in the world!
Africans are way better than Indians. Indians are snobby, rude, carry bad hygiene (the B.O) and ironically they're racist.

It is pot calling kettle here..
Because even citizens of your own country..who according to most Pakistanis were "Short, dark, lungi wearing, fish eating, unfit to rule the nation " Bengalis couldn't stomach your racism.. And decided to opt out of Pakistan.

Now here we have bunch ignorant folks.. singing hyms to how racially tolerant they are.
 
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It is pot calling kettle here..
Because even citizens of your own country..who according to most Pakistanis were "Short, dark, lungi wearing, fish eating, unfit to rule the nation " Bengalis couldn't stomach your racism.. And decided to opt out of Pakistan.

Now here we have bunch ignorant folks.. singing hyms to how racially tolerant they are.
Never mind those trolls their only business is to hate india.
 
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i agree on internet and mobile frauds by Africans even in pakistan abut prostitutes its all over the world you can not say a region or country .every city having them
 
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Actually Asians in general Are a little more "race conscious" than liberal Americans. Black actors are furious that they didn't get any Oscars again this year and part of the reason is that the Chinese market is now quite important forHollywood and Chinese don't have as much interest in black leads.

I am sure this will change with time as people travel more and meet different kinds of people more. The unknown is always threatening at first.

My hunch is that in a few generations we will be all be one mix of races with caramel colored skin and semi frizzy hair.
 
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Blacks and Jews have always been the biggest targets for racism in the world.

In fact these are Western prejudices that have spread elsewhere.

Jews in Europe were considered unclean by European Christians, so they had to go into the "money lending" and usury businesses. They ended up getting very rich, but they were despised by the locals for it. Leading to some deep ingrained conspiracy theories and prejudices against them.

These Western ideas have spread all over the world, to the point where there is even some antisemitism in East Asia, a region that has no history of antisemitism.
 
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Lets not kid ourselves.. South Asians, That includes Ind, Pak, Ban and SL along with others are inherently racist and prejudiced, Not only of outsiders but of their own people of different ethnicities, religions and worse off caste and social standing

Worse off is they have the audacity to accuse the West, That have improved leaps and bounds with race relations
 
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