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From DCentric: Brown, black, racism and relationships

Photo by 24oranges.nl/Flickr (Creative Commons)

One of Multi-American’s sister blogs on NPR’s Argo Network, WAMU 88.5′s DCentric in Washington, D.C., had a thought-provoking post yesterday on brown-on-black racism.

The short of it: Blogger Anna John, who is of Indian descent, had written last week about her exchange with an African-American taxi driver who was interested in John’s ethnicity because she had a half-Indian niece. The post drew several comments, including this one, below, which in turn inspired yesterday’s post.

From the reader, American RogueDC:

I remember very well having my heart broken by a co-worker (an Indian woman) whom I thought was a friend. We had worked together for more than ten years. One day, while viewing some photographs she was sharing of her female relatives taken during her baby-shower (I in fact had just given her my gift for the baby), I said, “You should introduce me to some of your nieces.” Her reply was simple, “You are too dark!” Until that moment, my being an African-American man who is only slightly darker in skin tone than her had never “seemed” to be a problem.

Heartbreaking, yes. And, sadly, par for the course, as John writes:

How painful, to be so crudely and immediately rejected by a long-time friend. The first thing I wondered was whether the woman was first- or second-generation.

My parents are immigrants; they are first-gen. I was born and raised here, so I’m “second”. Of course, this can get even more complicated, because there are people who were born abroad, who come here as children and are sometimes referred to as “1.5″s, but upon reflection, all of that is irrelevant. When you work with someone for ten years, there are better, gentler ways to let them down– and yet part of me wonders if that was exactly what this woman was trying to do.

Perhaps to her, “You are too dark!” was preferable to the bluntly honest and self-aware “my people are often quite racist, especially to Black people and Muslims.”

Both posts candidly explore where our varying shades and backgrounds take us in human relationships, and are well worth reading. So are the comments.

NewsHour Connect: Democrats tighten DREAM Act, hoping to appeal to GOP

Yesterday’s PBS NewsHour Connect featured a segment on the retooled version of the DREAM Act, which federal lawmakers are expected to vote on next week, the student activism surrounding the bill and its chances in Congress. I provided some analysis as a guest.

The segment is posted on The Rundown, the PBS NewsHour blog. NewsHour Connect recently interviewed two of my fellow NPR Argo Network correspondents, Heather Goldstone of the Climatide blog covering Cape Cod, and Cassandra Profita of the Ecotrope blog in Oregon, for a segment on ocean acidification.

On Halloween and ethnicity, commodified

Photo by Dana Robinson/Flickr (Creative Commons)

Par-tay! Ethnic drag on Halloween, October 2007

Halloween is nearly upon us, which means it must be time to, er, don an afro wig, a sombrero and fake mustache, or a Kim Jong Il costume? Nah, not so much.

Blogger Anna John of WAMU 88.5′s DCentric in Washington, D.C, one of Multi-American’s sister websites on the NPR Argo Network, had this to say about “ethnic” costumes in a post yesterday:

I save the side-eye for those special outfits which turn cultures in to costumes; while some people think it’s “fun” to be “Ghetto Fab“, “Seductive Squaw” or “Asian Doll“, I have to restrain myself from reminding these insensitive boors that some of us can’t take off our skin.

My point is, ethnicity isn’t something to be ordered online for $52.95 and then worn to a succession of bars, where other revelers spill drinks on your micro-kimono or faux-feathers. Some of us are born with a certain phenotype and this affects how we are viewed and treated, every moment of every day. We don’t have the luxury of selecting our culture from a catalog and then discarding it, conveniently, after a holiday.

This goes out to you, Mr. Fake Mustache Sombrero Wearer.

ColorLines and Angry Asian Man also had a few things to say about culturally offensive costumes.