Pink: Empowering

Early one morning in 2006, Sampat Pal Devi was making her way to sell vegetables at the local market in Bundelkhand, Northern India, when she heard someone whimpering. Around the next corner, she came across a neighbour beating his wife. Sampat was outraged but was unable to stop the violence by herself. The following day, she and five female friends returned to the location, confronted the man and gave him a thrashing.


Before long, other women approached Sampat to help with her fight against India’s deep-rooted problem with misogyny. This unlikely band of vigilantes quickly grew in both numbers and reputation. Their mission: “To protect the powerless from abuse and fight corruption to ensure basic rights of the poor in rural areas and discourage traditions like child marriages.” They are known as the Gulabi Gang (Gulabi is the Hindi word for pink) because all gang members dress in bright pink saris. And what an inspired choice of colour. Firstly, it’s a hue that stands out from the landscape’s muted tones and surrounding humble buildings. But perhaps more importantly, it is an emotionally charged colour that has stirred women and men for centuries.

In Western societies, pink suggests sensitivity, romance and femininity. For many decades, pink was a colour worn by both sexes. Considered a tint of red, men were comfortable seen in pink as it signalled passion, aggression and power. It was not until the mid-twentieth century that the colour became closely aligned with females. Guided by the increasing popularity of television, marketers positioned pink for girls and blue for boys to help sell products. It was an effective strategy, still influential today. Recently, however, women have redefined the meaning of pink, specifically bright pink. And the women of the Gulabi Gang are doing their bit to help give pink a new purpose.


Before the 1850s, colour dyes came from natural substances such as plants, berries, bark, leaves and fungi. Creating a stable, rich pink was next to impossible. Nothing in nature provided a reliable pigment. As a result, pink fabrics tended to be soft, pastel tints. In 1856, British chemist William Perkins inadvertently invented the first synthetic dye while working on a cure for malaria. It was an intense shade of purple that came to be known as ‘Mauvine.’ The introduction of numerous new bright-coloured dyes, including a vibrant magenta, quickly transformed the dyestuff industry. The fashion world embraced these intense shades, soon becoming must-haves in the wardrobes of wealthy Victorian women.

Photo: 20th Century Fox

Fashion trends are forever evolving. By World War I, women’s apparel returned to softer, more subtle shades. There is nothing quite like a war to add a sense of constraint to the zeitgeist. Then, in the 1930s, the Italian couturier, Elsa Schiaparelli, arrived on the scene. The risk-taking designer adopted “Shocking Pink” as her signature colour, single-handily re-energizing the world of couture. Since then, bright pink has never looked back. It required a certain amount of swagger to wear her shocking pink creations, making people turn heads. Confident, unabashed women found the colour irresistible. Marilyn Monroe wore the electric colour in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy wore it to meet foreign dignitaries. Like the song from the 1957 movie, Funny Face professed, “Think pink! Think pink! When you shop for summer clothes. Think pink! Think pink! If you want that quelque chose.”

Punks in the late 1970s brandished pink ‘mohawk’ haircuts as a sign of rebellion. In 2017, many participants in the over 600 international ‘Women’s March’ rallies wore pink ‘Pussy Hats’ to draw attention to women’s rights. “Pink is going through a generational shift,” says Valerie Steele, editor of Pink: The History of a Punk, Pretty, Powerful Color. “Society is increasingly moving away from the idea of it as a childish, over-sexualized hue. There’s a shared recognition that pink can be pretty and powerful, feminine and feminist.”

Photo: CODEPINK

That brings us back to the Gulabi Gang. Currently, they boast 400,000 members who proudly wear pink in solidarity against the excessive amount of violence against Indian women. All colours abound with history, meaning and symbology. Pink has blossomed into a hue that now represents strong-willed individuals and groups who choose to be seen and heard.

















Saffron

Groovy Car Colours