dheerja
Member
- Messages
- 607
Dear bhangra community,
This has been brought up time and time again on this forum, and we've all struggled with these issues for a while. But after this past weekend at Motor City Bhangra, I want to have a real discussion about change.
Every single person here has seen or heard of the crap that occurs during competition weekends. Hotel rooms destroyed, fire alarms pulled, people being harassed, fights breaking out in the lobby. It's jarring, but at the same time we've adopted a jaded mentality towards this behavior. We chalk it up to certain teams or groupies, and resign ourselves to the fact that things will never change. I'm absolutely guilty of this, even though I've seen this behavior only get increasingly worse as teams get younger and the lack of respect or values spreads.
I could sit here and relate to you hundreds of stories over my 9 years in the bhangra circuit. But this past weekend, I reached my limit. I'll keep this story short because the details are irrelevant and will only cause people to focus on this instance, when there are countless other similar cases.
On Saturday night after the MCB after party, we were hanging out with our team only in one of our rooms at the hotel. Two drunk guys showed up on our floor and proceeded to verbally abuse the 13 girls present, saying things that I've never heard out of someone's mouth and couldn't bring myself to type here. As we tried to get them to leave, one of them punched a female dancer straight in the face.
While this by far isn't the first time I've seen violence at a bhangra competition, it's the first time I've seen real violence against a woman. I woke up in the morning to see DCMPAA checking out of the hotel and wanted to tell those young girls to stop dancing. Bhangra competitions are no longer a safe place for anyone. Our art form is being represented in this violent manner, and as venues and hotels continue to experience this behavior, we'll start to lose the opportunity to perform. How can we sit here and accept this as inevitable?
I'm coming to you, the bhangra community, to demand action, and I'm ready to lead this change. The discussion is ripe right now, so let's take advantage of that momentum and stop things before the bhangra scene continues down this path. Here is my plan:
1) Bhangra Pulse - A new Bhangra Pulse episode will be coming out this weekend where Sulman and I honestly discuss this issue and what we can do to change things.
2) Call to Action Video - I'm making a video over the next two months, interviewing teams, community members, and competition organizers to hear their experiences and what they think we can do to change. I'm starting in the NYC area and will be at Bhangra in the Bell, contact me if you're interested in participating. There is so much that happens that we don't even know about, and getting all these in one place will be a starting point.
3) Polling Organizers - I'm forming an action committee to help me with this endeavor. Firstly, we'll reach out to ALL competition organizers to anonymously poll them on monetary damage, consequences from hotels, whether they plan to continue hosting competitions, and what we as a community can do to stop this. If you're interested in being a part of this, please contact me.
4) Petition - The impetus needs to come from the teams first. We need to band together and form a petition for ALL competitions to institute a zero tolerance policy. Teams should be banned and money withheld for bad behavior and better security should be provided throughout the weekend. If necessary, cancel after parties and stop providing alcohol since clearly people can't handle themselves in these circumstances.
Some of you will tell me this is futile, and perhaps it is. But as a community we need to make every effort we can to make this a safe place, or we will lose the opportunity to participate in the art form we all love.
This has been brought up time and time again on this forum, and we've all struggled with these issues for a while. But after this past weekend at Motor City Bhangra, I want to have a real discussion about change.
Every single person here has seen or heard of the crap that occurs during competition weekends. Hotel rooms destroyed, fire alarms pulled, people being harassed, fights breaking out in the lobby. It's jarring, but at the same time we've adopted a jaded mentality towards this behavior. We chalk it up to certain teams or groupies, and resign ourselves to the fact that things will never change. I'm absolutely guilty of this, even though I've seen this behavior only get increasingly worse as teams get younger and the lack of respect or values spreads.
I could sit here and relate to you hundreds of stories over my 9 years in the bhangra circuit. But this past weekend, I reached my limit. I'll keep this story short because the details are irrelevant and will only cause people to focus on this instance, when there are countless other similar cases.
On Saturday night after the MCB after party, we were hanging out with our team only in one of our rooms at the hotel. Two drunk guys showed up on our floor and proceeded to verbally abuse the 13 girls present, saying things that I've never heard out of someone's mouth and couldn't bring myself to type here. As we tried to get them to leave, one of them punched a female dancer straight in the face.
While this by far isn't the first time I've seen violence at a bhangra competition, it's the first time I've seen real violence against a woman. I woke up in the morning to see DCMPAA checking out of the hotel and wanted to tell those young girls to stop dancing. Bhangra competitions are no longer a safe place for anyone. Our art form is being represented in this violent manner, and as venues and hotels continue to experience this behavior, we'll start to lose the opportunity to perform. How can we sit here and accept this as inevitable?
I'm coming to you, the bhangra community, to demand action, and I'm ready to lead this change. The discussion is ripe right now, so let's take advantage of that momentum and stop things before the bhangra scene continues down this path. Here is my plan:
1) Bhangra Pulse - A new Bhangra Pulse episode will be coming out this weekend where Sulman and I honestly discuss this issue and what we can do to change things.
2) Call to Action Video - I'm making a video over the next two months, interviewing teams, community members, and competition organizers to hear their experiences and what they think we can do to change. I'm starting in the NYC area and will be at Bhangra in the Bell, contact me if you're interested in participating. There is so much that happens that we don't even know about, and getting all these in one place will be a starting point.
3) Polling Organizers - I'm forming an action committee to help me with this endeavor. Firstly, we'll reach out to ALL competition organizers to anonymously poll them on monetary damage, consequences from hotels, whether they plan to continue hosting competitions, and what we as a community can do to stop this. If you're interested in being a part of this, please contact me.
4) Petition - The impetus needs to come from the teams first. We need to band together and form a petition for ALL competitions to institute a zero tolerance policy. Teams should be banned and money withheld for bad behavior and better security should be provided throughout the weekend. If necessary, cancel after parties and stop providing alcohol since clearly people can't handle themselves in these circumstances.
Some of you will tell me this is futile, and perhaps it is. But as a community we need to make every effort we can to make this a safe place, or we will lose the opportunity to participate in the art form we all love.