Showing posts with label ani. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ani. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2025

Why ANI ancestry dominates Bollywood


Why ANI ancestry dominates Bollywood

Bollywood’s obsession with lighter skin and sharp features didn’t start with colonialism — the roots run far deeper, into India’s ancient history.

Even today, Indian cinema (including Tollywood) reflects these old preferences. Here’s how it happened — with examples.


1. Bollywood Evolved in North India

Bollywood began in Mumbai (then Bombay), a city historically tied to northern India through migration from Punjab, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan.
 Northern and northwestern Indians generally carry more ANI (Ancestral North Indian) ancestry — genetically linked to Central Asian, Persian, and early Indo-European groups.

Thus, the early faces of Bollywood — from Raj Kapoor to Dev Anand — often showcased lighter skin, straighter noses, and taller frames, typical of ANI-heavy populations.

Even today, many leading actors like Hrithik Roshan and Kareena Kapoor Khan come from families rooted in North India, carrying forward that visual template.


2. Beauty Standards: Pre-Colonial, Mughal, and Colonial Influence

The preference for fair skin in India long predates British colonialism.

Ancient Hindu texts such as the Manusmriti and Puranic stories often describe gods and ideal humans as having radiant, golden, or fair complexions.
 For instance, Lord Krishna — whose name literally means “dark” — is sometimes visually depicted in later eras with lighter or bluish skin to soften his “darkness” in art and literature.

During Mughal rule, this bias deepened. Mughal miniatures often portrayed nobility with pale skin tones, drawing from Persian aesthetics where light skin symbolized elite status.
 Look at historical love stories like Anarkali and Salim — Anarkali was mythologized as a breathtakingly fair woman.

By the time the British arrived, India already equated fairness with wealth, refinement, and desirability. Colonial rule only codified this hierarchy — legally and socially.

Bollywood, reflecting society, continued the trend.
 Fair-skinned stars like Madhubala, Meena Kumari, Sadhana, and later Aishwarya Rai became iconic for their ethereal, light-skinned beauty.


3. Class and Access to Opportunities

Higher social groups historically had greater ANI ancestry — and by extension, better access to wealth, education, and opportunity.
 Cinema, being expensive to enter and risky in early decades, became dominated by elites.

For example, Prithviraj Kapoor, the patriarch of Bollywood’s Kapoor dynasty, hailed from a literate, influential Punjabi family.
 Similarly, Dilip Kumar (born Muhammad Yusuf Khan) came from a well-to-do Pathan family.

Their urban, connected backgrounds — along with their socially “approved” appearance — helped them thrive in the nascent industry.


4. Urban Migration Patterns

Migration patterns to Mumbai and other cities played a huge role too.

Most early Bollywood stars — such as Ashok Kumar, Dev Anand, Rajendra Kumar, and Sunil Dutt — were products of urban migration waves dominated by relatively well-off northern families.

Wealthier northern families had the means to send children to arts colleges, drama schools, or simply to support a struggling acting career — luxuries that most rural Indians couldn’t afford.


5. Tollywood’s Parallel Bias

Interestingly, even in Tollywood (Telugu cinema), where male heroes like Chiranjeevi, Prabhas, or Allu Arjun often sport darker, more Dravidian features proudly, the female leads often tell a different story.

Heroines are frequently imported from North India:
 Kajal Aggarwal (Mumbai, Punjabi family), Tamannaah Bhatia (Mumbai, Sindhi family), Hansika Motwani (Mumbai, Sindhi family), and Rakul Preet Singh (Delhi, Punjabi family) — all fair-skinned, north-origin actresses dominating Telugu screens.

Even Pooja Hegde — although born in Karnataka — fits the pan-Indian fair-skin aesthetic preferred for female leads.

Thus, the “fairness fixation” isn’t just a Bollywood quirk — it’s a pan-Indian phenomenon, affecting casting choices even in southern industries that otherwise celebrate darker-skinned male heroes.


In Short:

Historical north Indian dominance +
 Pre-colonial, Mughal, and colonial beauty standards +
 Class-based access to elite opportunities =
 A film industry where ANI-featured faces became (and still often remain) the default.


But Times Are Changing

Modern Indian cinema is gradually shifting.

Actors like Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Vijay Sethupathi, Dhanush, and actresses like Sai Pallavi are breaking traditional beauty norms, gaining immense popularity despite not fitting the old “fair-skinned” ideal.

OTT platforms have further democratized opportunities — allowing talent from every part of India, regardless of skin tone or facial features, to shine.

The change is slow — but it’s happening.
 Indian cinema, like Indian society, is beginning to confront and question its oldest biases.


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The Story of India’s Ancient Migrations: AASI, ASI, ANI and How They Shaped Us

 


The Story of India’s Ancient Migrations: AASI, ASI, ANI and How They Shaped Us

ndia’s history isn’t just about kings and kingdoms — it’s also about the people who lived here thousands of years ago. Their story is written in our DNA. If you’ve ever wondered, “Where did we Indians come from?”, the answer lies in understanding AASI, ASI, and ANI — three key terms scientists use to describe ancient Indian ancestry.

Let’s break it down step-by-step.


AASI — The First Indians

  • Who were they?
     AASI stands for “Ancient Ancestral South Indians.” They were the descendants of some of the earliest humans to leave Africa around 50,000–60,000 years ago and settle in India.
  • What did they look like?
     AASI people likely had dark skin, curly hair, and features similar to many Indigenous groups found in South India today (like some Adivasi groups and Andamanese people).
  • Where did they live?
     All across the Indian subcontinent — forests, hills, plains.
     Example today: Many tribal (Adivasi) communities retain more AASI ancestry, like the Irula, Kurumba, and some Andamanese tribes (like the Onge and Jarawa).

ASI and ANI: Origins and Appearance

1. Ancestral South Indians (ASI)

  • The ASI mainly descend from a very ancient population called Ancient Ancestral South Indians (AASI).
  • These AASI are believed to have been indigenous hunter-gatherers already living in India before any major outside migrations.
  • Their ancestors likely came from Africa via the Southern Coastal Route, but by about 50,000 years ago, they were fully settled in India — mainly southern India and parts of central India.
  • They have no direct modern equivalent outside India (unlike ANI who are linked to Middle East/Central Asia).
  • Physical Appearance (likely):
     Based on ancient DNA and anthropology:
  • Darker skin (even darker than average Indians today).
  • Broad features, shorter height, wavy to curly hair.
  • Similar in looks to many modern South Indian tribals (like the Irula, Paniya, and other Adivasi groups).

2. Ancestral North Indians (ANI)

  • ANI are a mixed group:
  • Early Iranian farmers (~9,000 years ago) from today’s Iran and eastern Fertile Crescent.
  • Later, they mixed again with Steppe pastoralists (Yamnaya culture people) from Central Asia (modern-day Kazakhstan, Russia south, Ukraine area) — around 2000–1500 BCE during the Indo-Aryan migrations.
  • Physical Appearance (likely):
     Based on ancient remains and reconstructions:
  • Lighter skin (compared to ASI), though still brown compared to Europeans.
  • Sharper, narrower features — straighter noses, more angular faces.
  • Taller average height.
  • They would have looked similar to people living today in northern Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan, or northwestern Indians like some Punjabis, Kashmiris, etc.

Quick Map of Their Origins

  • ASI (AASI roots): Indigenous South Asians — India was their main homeland.
  • ANI: Mixed between Iranian farmers (Today’s Iran) and Steppe pastoralists (Today’s Kazakhstan, southern Russia, Ukraine)

After ANI Formation (~1500 BCE onwards):

1. Regional Mixing (1500 BCE — 500 BCE)

  • ANI mixed heavily with the ASI populations in different parts of India.
  • How much ANI vs ASI you had depended on where you lived:
  • In northwest India (Punjab, Haryana): ANI ancestry stayed higher.
  • In south India: ASI ancestry stayed dominant.
  • In central and eastern India: heavy mixing, with varied results.

This mixture created the ancestral base of most modern Indians.


2. Formation of Caste Groups (around 1000 BCE — 1 CE)

  • Genetic studies show that strict caste-like social divisions (endogamy — marrying within your group) started around 1000 BCE.
  • Before that, people mixed more freely.
  • After that, marriages became more “closed”, and populations became genetically more distinct, region by region, caste by caste.
  • So even today, two neighboring Indian communities can be surprisingly genetically different.

3. Later Minor Migrations (after 500 BCE)

After ANI formation, small later migrations also happened, but nothing as huge as before:

  • Greeks (after Alexander ~326 BCE) — mainly in northwest (Punjab, Bactria).
  • Scythians/Sakas (Iranian nomads) — 200 BCE onwards, especially northwest and western India.
  • Kushans (Central Asian rulers, Yuezhi tribes) — 1st century CE, northwest India.
  • Islamic invasions (from ~700 CE) — Arab, Turkic, Persian gene flow into north and west India.
  • European colonialists (Portuguese, British) — very tiny genetic impact.

But:
 These were tiny layers compared to the ancient ANI–ASI mixture, which was the major event shaping the Indian genome.


4. Today’s Indian Population

  • Modern Indians are almost all a mix of ANI and ASI in varying proportions.
  • North Indians generally have more ANI (~60–80%).
  • South Indians generally have more ASI (~50–70%).
  • Tribals often have the highest ASI and lowest outside admixture.

Final Thoughts

Today, every Indian is a blend — some with a bit more ANI, some with more ASI.
 Whether you’re from Punjab or Tamil Nadu, your roots go back to the brave AASI people who first crossed from Africa into India tens of thousands of years ago.

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