That said, in Urdu, "kala" is the word for black color or skin. "kaloo" is the word meaning "black person." it is not a derogatory word any more than "black person" is, so PP whose family uses that word- I wonder if it's the context or the other adjectives used, but I don't believe kulloo is considered a bad word. Then again, I'm first generation and raised here, so I might be missing the subtleties of that term as used by immigrants.
Anonymous wrote:I am an immigrant from India. Been here for about 10 years. I don't have any friends who speak like that. I am from the South and have no idea what "Kike" means!
Anonymous wrote:People have issues in every group. It's group insecurity disguised as superiority.
For the record, this AA has always had great relationships with South Asians. I have found all that have crossed my path to be warm and welcoming. The one family I know who had issues when their daughter decided to marry an AA got over it when they realized that he would be a good provider for her. I think the class/caste thing is deep. And the irony was that this woman and her kin where many, many shades darker than this guy.
OP, you just need to find a new group of friends.
Anonymous wrote:The "k" word is clearly kike.
- poster with incredibly bigoted FIL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lighter skin is always valued more, no matter if it's in India, Italy or Cuba. That's the sad truth.
Italy?
Lighter skin is always valued more, no matter if it's in India, Italy or Cuba. That's the sad truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have many South Asian acquaintances and friends. We are in Fairfax County. A few friends have quirks regarding other South Asians (from dark skin/light skin to where someone's family is from exactly), these few also have trouble making South Asian friends but it is due to these quirks mostly. We as you can see discuss this every time we get together.
I think it's now considered kind of old-school and trashy to talk about skin tone these days. None of our friends make comments on that sort of thing. When the older people make comments, most people just roll their eyes. Where do you find this South Asians?
In reference to the dark/light skin topic, are you aware that black Americans also talk like this? They still have the hierarchy with the skin tone within their own community.
Anonymous wrote:Lighter skin is always valued more, no matter if it's in India, Italy or Cuba. That's the sad truth.