In 2017, Indian comedian Hari Kondabolu released a documentary called "The Problem with Apu," detailing the racist depiction of the character. Eventually, due to negative publicity, "The Simpsons" removed the character from the show.
But not all Indians felt the same. Akaash Singh, also a comedian, has a special called "Bring Back Apu." In a NY Times article, he explains why he is pro-Apu. The article opens with a quote from his special:
Here is a brown man married to a beautiful brown woman, owns his own business, selling overpriced products to unwitting white people. Apu is not racist. He’s the American dream.
But he explains his perspective further:
Singh is quick to compliment Kondabolu, who he said reached out to him after hearing him on a podcast. “He said I implied he didn’t work hard and I said I don’t think that at all,” Singh said, praising Kondabolu’s joke writing and work ethic. “My issue is with your mentality,” Singh said he told his fellow comic. “The victimhood mentality. The mentality weakens us as a people.”
There was an organization that's purpose used to be enlightening frei Jews as to what being frum meant. It did so cheerfully, educating readers without being insulted by the oddball assumptions they had to clarify.
But as the various minorities began to clamber up their soapboxes, they also shifted. Now, with furrow-browed intent, they focus on misrepresentations in media, demanding for change.
When Singh talked about victimhood, it occurred to me why I found the change in attitude disconcerting.
As you know, I'm a descendant of survivors. Not only did they survive the war (dayenu!) they then had to flee their rebuilt lives 10 years later when the die-hard communists came to power. They had to move to a new country and start again, again.
It was not right, on any level, what they had to go through. But if they had stopped to focus only on their injustice, they would not have achieved anything.
If you kvetch too much, no one will want to be around you. Including your own family. And you don't get anywhere.
My grandparents were well within their rights to collapse into helpless mush. But they didn't. They were victims once. They didn't stay victims forever.
Constantly focusing on those who have sinned against you isn't healthy. Nor does it accomplish anything.
This organization could still do the work they do . . . with a little more humor. Less "this has to stop!!!" Rabid racists won't change their mind anyway, and most people are simply misinformed, not malicious.
I'm not saying they aren't right. But being right isn't always enough.
“There’s merit to both sides,” Singh said. “I’m not completely right, as much as I would love to be.”
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