Cycling for change: Peter Ngugi’s one-man quest to protest racism against Africans in India
LivingAmita GhoseNov, 25 2017 12:10:27 IST
As the lone bicyclist pedals into Kolkata on a weekday morning, a crowd of around 1,400 people gathers on the streets to cheer him on. In a yellow t-shirt and shirts, with a satchel on his back, and helmet bent against the November sun, Peter Ngugi, 25, doesn’t strike a particularly impressive figure. It’s only when he begins to speak, and you take stock of the endeavor he’s set for himself, that you begin to see him as different, special.
Ngugi, who hails from Mombasa in Kenya, came to India in 2013. He lived in Mumbai and Chennai before finally moving to Bengaluru for a project with IBM. Over the years, he experienced the racism that Africans living in India have reported — the stereotyping as drug peddlers or prostitutes, the calls of ‘Negro!’, ‘aye kaala’, ‘kaalu’, ‘apshu’ when you step out. But a spate of incidents in 2017, when Africans in India were assaulted, molested, chased by mobs, made Ngugi determined to do something to combat the racism.
“I was working in Bengaluru when a guy from Congo was beaten to death in Delhi. There were viral videos of Africans being assaulted all across India. A Black woman was beaten up and molested in Bengaluru while she was just taking a walk on the road. Every day you stepped out, you knew your life was under threat,” Ngugi told Firstpost, during his Kolkata pit-stop.
“Do you know what it’s like to be scarred for life (by racism)? You might not, unless you’re visiting a European country and the Whites treat you in exactly the same way Africans are treated here,” Ngugi added. “I’ve seen how Africans are stereotyped here in India — we’re thought of as being involved in the drug trade or prostitution. I don’t know what this propaganda is all about!”
What angered him further was the African and Indian government’s silence on the issue. What might be a unique yet peaceful way to protest the rising violence, he wondered. “These were clearly racial (hate) crimes, but no one was speaking about it, either in Africa or India. I came up with the idea of a cycling trip because it would be a way to spread awareness in different parts of the country,” Ngugi said.
Starting in Shillong on 28 October, Ngugi is making his way towards Kanyakumari, from where he will ride back to Delhi. He hopes to cover a total of 6,700 km on his bicycle, stopping at major towns and cities like Guwahati, Bhubaneshwar, Kolkata [this leg of Ngugi’s tour is complete], Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kanyakumari, Kochi, Goa (mostly Panjim), Pune, Mumbai and Ahmedabad. He intends to reach Delhi on 10 February 2018. His tour is being supported by the African Youth Union in India as well as the Kenyan Ambassador’s Office here.