Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
India

Wear loin cloth if against Westernism, designer tells Goa minister

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Jul, 2014 11:52 AM
    The controversy over a Goa cabinet minister's demand to ban mini-skirts and bikinis in order to "protect Goan culture" refuses to die down, with ace fashion designer Wendell Rodricks asking him to to wear a loin cloth to work, skip chillies, tomatoes, potatoes, and stop using a table and chair at work if he believes in shunning Western influences and culture.
     
    Rodricks' open letter to "The Goan Minister", does not name Public Works Department (PWD) Minister Sudin Dhavalikar but makes several allusions to the references made by Dhavalikar, who some days back demanded a ban on bikinis and mini-skirts to the beaches and night clubs respectively.
     
    The letter, which has evoked tremendous support in the social media, also said that the minister's utterances made Goans seem "non-progressive, archaic and dangerously right wing".
     
    "Shirts (European), Pants/Pyjamas (Chinese/Central Asia), socks, T-shirt and baniyan; yes your underwear too (Jersey was invented in Europe), Kurtas (Central Asia, Ottoman, Moghul). That leaves you with a kashti or pudvem and a shawl or cloth to cover your torso. Will you agree to go to your ministry office in this attire?" asked Rodricks in his letter.
     
    One of India's top fashion designers and known for his minimalist style, Rodricks drew on sarcasm to maximal impact in his letter while also lacing it with historic fact.
     
    "By the way, it was not in Indian culture for Indian women to wear a bra or a sari petticoat. The former came from France, the latter from Victorian England. Also, when the coloniser came to Goa, there were no cholis, except for the devadasis who used a kind of choli," he said.
     
    Dhavalikar had attracted controversy when he recently said: "Young girls wearing short skirts in nightclubs are a threat to the Goan culture. This habit of young girls wearing short dresses everywhere does not fit the Goan culture. What will happen to it if this continues? We should not allow this. It should be stopped." 
     
    He also advised that women should stop drinking, "because it is not good for their health".
     
    Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar subsequently said Wednesday that while he agreed with the contentions of the minister which he heard over a private conversation with the latter, there was no question of banning bikinis on Goa's beaches.
     
    Rodricks, a Padma Shri award winner, also draws from his research undertaken for his book "Moda Goa: History and Style", which documents the history of Goan costume.
     
    "Since we are on the topic of Indianess, you will have to also stop eating potatoes, tomatoes, chilli, cashew, chickoos, pineapples and many other fruits, vegetables and spices that were alien to India," he said, adding that Dhavalikar would also have to "cut off the power, throw out the table, chairs, computer, telephone, cell phone, aircon, teacups, Rolex watch, Mont Blanc pen. All paper and files too (both invented in China).
     
    The designer also accused Dhavalikar of trying to kill the vital tourism industry.
     
    "The fact is that we have a more progressive mindset than many states in the country. Opinions expressed should not be made until there is a knowledge of history and culture: We are a tourist state. Please do not kill the goose that lays the golden eggs," Rodricks said.
     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Badal meets Modi, demands probe into 1984 riot

    Badal meets Modi, demands probe into 1984 riot
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Friday called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi here and demanded early resolution of a variety of issues, including terrorism, and a probe into the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

    Badal meets Modi, demands probe into 1984 riot

    Acid put in man's eyes, fingers chopped in Bihar

    Acid put in man's eyes, fingers chopped in Bihar
    A man has sustained serious injuries in Bihar after a group of people chopped off his fingers and poured acid in his eyes over a minor dispute, police said Friday.

    Acid put in man's eyes, fingers chopped in Bihar

    Modi to address Bhutanese parliament in first foreign visit

    Modi to address Bhutanese parliament in first foreign visit
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address the joint session of the Bhutanese parliament and discuss ways to boost trade with its Himalayan neighbour, with which India has several hydropower projects, in his two-day trip to Bhutan, his first visit abroad in less than a month after assuming office .

    Modi to address Bhutanese parliament in first foreign visit

    Modi releases commemorative 2014 FIFA World Cup postage stamps

    Modi releases commemorative 2014 FIFA World Cup postage stamps
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi released commemorative postage stamps on the 2014 FIFA World Cup that gets underway in Brazil Thursday night.

    Modi releases commemorative 2014 FIFA World Cup postage stamps

    Murthy to step down, Sikka is new CEO of Infosys

    Murthy to step down, Sikka is new CEO of Infosys
    In a dramatic development, India's second largest global software major Infosys Ltd. Thursday announced that Vishal Sikka would be its new chief executive and managing director from Aug 1. Co-founder and chairman N.R. Narayana Murthy will step down June 14.

    Murthy to step down, Sikka is new CEO of Infosys

    E-files, the new Modi mantra to paperless governance

    E-files, the new Modi mantra to paperless governance
    No more piles of dog-eared files and clipped paper stacks littering office desks. It is the time of e-files in the new government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    E-files, the new Modi mantra to paperless governance