I bet you are American who is saying this? Real African couldn't care less, they have real problems to deal with. |
I think *this* is cultural appropriation:
![]() You're fine. |
Well, to be fair, dungarees did originate in India. |
Listen go to the St.Patrick's Day Parade in New York. All the Catholic school girls march in their tartan plaid uniforms and about 90% of them are AA or hispanic. |
It's religious. I do not understand why they even allow bindis to be sold to whites/non-Indians like Gwen Stefani (who's as white as they come). |
Cultural appropriation has to do with something that is ritualistic to a certain group, like a Native American headress. The headress means something very specific and is part of custom. Plaid is a fabric that a culture created and sold, it has no furthering spiritual meaning. God the Millennials and their obsession with this topic is making me crazy. I heard that at some college the students were protesting fried rice as cultural appropriation because the restaurant did not make it authentic enough. I wanted to slap them all. I blame Lena Dunham. |
No, that's globalization showing via fashion trends.
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You know, religion shouldn't be so damn sacred. She liked it, she wore it. The only time I think it should be a problem is if people are making fun of it in some way. Like, hey, if some black woman wants to wear a plaid skirt, I'm not gonna get my scottish panties in a wad. |
+1. Also, while they may originally have been religious, they certainly aren't sacred objects like a rosary or something. I wear them for decorative purposes with Indian clothes, but I consider them an accessory - no different from carrying a purse that matches my outfit. I'm of Indian origin but not religious. |
+100. More Indians share this view than get hung up over accessories & their religious/spiritual aspects. Like who cares. I would draw a line though on printing Ganesh symbols on footwear and t -shirts. Now that is offensive. |
Just don't wear a chopstick in your hair because that's just stupid. |
I think you must be exhausted from overthinking trivial shit like this. |
You know that in the late 80s their were gang in NY and NY that targeted Hindu Indians. Men and women were harassed, attacked and assaulted. The gangs called themselves Dotbusters, in reference to the fact that Hindu women wear the bindi as a part of their religion. Saying that it's nothing but a fashion accessory when Indians have been attacked and targeted for wearing a bindi and being associated with it is grossly disturbing. If a Hindu women went into a job interview, I assure you the interviewer would not view it as merely a fashion accessory. It is complete lack of awareness and intellect to say it's no different from a purse. |
First of all, who is "they"? Second, you are confounding religion and race/ethnicity. Whites can be Hindu, and Indians can be Christian, Muslim, atheist, etc. |
Well anyway, everyone agrees cultural appropriation is deplorable. |