When Colour
Matters:
Depictions of South Asians in the mainstream media
by
Munisha Tumato August 25, 2007
The day the RCMP foiled a large-scale plot
to bomb Toronto was a day of rude awakening for Canadians.
It was a day when many realized that Canada is not a neutral
ground, immune to the conflict going on in the world. Coincidentally,
the first news day of the thwarted Toronto terror plot was
also my first day as an intern in one of Canada's top national
newsrooms.
In the morning story pitch meeting, discussions
centered around a potential story for the evening line up
– an interview with Cheryfa Macaulay Jamal, the wife
of Qayyum Abdul Jamal, the alleged ring leader of the 'terrorist'
group. Cheryfa had converted to Islam after meeting her husband.
The producers in the room and on conference
call from Toronto were discussing whether or not the story
was going to be in the evening line up. In attempting to determine
the story's newsworthiness, one of the producers in Toronto
asked if Cheryfa Jamal was white. When the producers in the
room answered yes, the producer on the phone asked, "Yes…but
does she look white?"
This could simply be my impression of things,
but it seemed the implication was that the story would be
most interesting to the show's audience if the woman was white-looking.
Perhaps if the woman had been of South Asian or Middle Eastern
descent, with 'brown' skin, the story may not have been newsworthy
enough to make the evening news. The producers seemed mostly
interested in the woman's reasons for converting to Islam.
It is possible that the discussion may have
evolved differently if the producer on the phone had been
in the room and had seen that the new intern – namely
me – was not white. But the impression I walked away
with was that, in this newsroom, a white woman in a burqa
is a relevant news story. A brown woman in a burqa is not.
From my perspective, I couldn't understand
why an interview with the wife of the ringleader of a thwarted,
large-scale terror plot wasn't newsworthy in and of itself.
It was difficult for me to understand how the woman's skin
color was the determining factor for the story's newsworthiness.
I never considered bringing any of this
up in the meeting. Apart from being the greenest person on
the floor, and a somewhat nervous and eager-to-please intern,
I was also one of the only non-white people in the room. I
didn't think that a discussion instigated by me about why
brown women aren't newsworthy would be welcome.
After the meeting, I was taken aside by
one of the producers who first asked me if I was Muslim, and
then explained to me, with the best of intentions, that this
was the 'real world,' not the idealistic haven of university,
and that the newsroom was a safe place for journalists to
vent their own fears and frustrations – so long as those
emotions didn't make it into the news, of course.
I don't want to demonize the newsroom I
was working in, because this sort of experience appears to
be more norm than exception for journalists of colour in Canada's
newsrooms.
The great unanswered question, says John
Miller, former chair and current professor at Ryerson University's
school of journalism, is whether or not there is a connection
between the diversity of journalists in a newsroom and that
newsroom's diversity of coverage.
In 2004, Miller completed a ten-year study
examining diversity amongst the staff at Canadian newspapers.
He found that the number of minority journalists had gone
up slightly – from 2.6 per cent to 3.4 per cent in a
decade.
Based on his research, Miller believes that
"most people accept that diversity in the newsroom leads
to more conversations in the newsroom, more contacts and broader
coverage. Even if [minorities] are not covering the stories,
they're talking with the people who are."
But minority representation in newsrooms
hasn't come close to keeping pace with the growing minority
population, so the percentage of minority journalists has
actually fallen behind. Also, minorities are almost completely
absent among the ranks of editors and producers – those
in decision-making positions in the newsroom.
Major metropolitan newspapers over the last
50 years have been subject to declining circulation numbers
and shrinking newsrooms. But the ethnic media is one sector
of the industry displaying the reverse trend.
Ben Viccari of the Canadian Ethnic Media
Association says that Canada's ethnic media has seen extraordinary
growth since end of World War II, "from about seventy
newspapers, magazines and radio programs to around 1,000,
now including TV and Internet."
Many immigrants turn to newspapers and programs
in their mother tongue for news from their home country, says
Viccari. But often editors in the ethnic media sector cite
unfair depictions of their community in the mainstream as
a reason for starting their publications.
Rana Vig is the founder of Mehfil magazine.
Mehfil is a popular, fourteen-year-old English language magazine
aimed at the South Asian community in the Lower Mainland.
"Mehfil is 100% a response to mainstream
depictions of South Asians," says Vig. "We started
the magazine because we got tired of people thinking that
Indo-Canadians are taxi and truck drivers. Clearly we're not.
We've had a great hand in building this country from the arts
to business. Indian people today are in very influential positions.
That's why we came up with Mehfil - to highlight the positives
in the Indo-Canadian community."
"As the young generation matures, if
all you see is the negativity – your community being
portrayed in a certain way – you very much feel that
that's what we must be," says Vig, who immigrated to
Canada with his family in the 70s, when he was still a child.
Many journalists working in the ethnic media
sector worked for mainstream media in their home countries.
Rattan Mall, the outspoken editor of the Indo-Canadian Voice
in Vancouver was a correspondent for the Times of India –
one of India's top national newspapers. London-born Veeno
Diwan is currently an associate editor at Apna G newspaper
in Surrey. He began his career as a producer at the BBC. Both
express disillusionment with mainstream depictions of the
South Asian community in Canada.
The problem, says Miller is that journalists
are as prone – if not more so – to exaggerated
fear of 'the Other' based on unbalanced coverage. "Minorities
are depicted as the other bringing alien traditions to our
fine community, and if an incident is serious enough it almost
becomes a moral panic situation where you get columnists talking
about 'send them back to where they came from', or 'lets set
up detention camps,'" says Miller.
"That's certainly been the case
in Toronto and it's amazing how the coverage goes off in that
direction, sometimes at the expense of accuracy."
Cheryfa Macaulay Jamal
(left), wife of Qayyum Abdul Jamal, the alleged ring leader
of the 'terrorist' group