Summer 2020 - TIME FOR CHANGE

Page 66

WHAT IS BLACK? IN TERMS OF PEOPLE, BLACKNESS IS NOT SYNONYMOUS WITH HOMOGENEITY. by Donnyale Ambrosine

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round the globe, no matter where you find the shade of skin that ranges from milky to mocha, deep chocolate to charcoal, as varied as the skin tone, so are the representations and cultures. Yet many reduce the plethora of rich experiences, food, traditions and people to a single term. Media mogul Oprah Winfrey once shared her experience with identity naming in the United States, musing during a speech that in her lifetime of sixty-some years, she’s been referred to as negro, then colored, then black, African American and now a person of color. Not everyone within this group may agree on how to be referenced, but most see and experience, racism, oppression and the ever-present boot of white supremacy in social structures worldwide. As far as how she identifies, “I am neither racially white or black,” says Miya Kim during our conversation in the Facebook group “Third Culture Kids Everywhere.” Kim was born in South Korea, lived in Germany during adolescence and currently resides in Calif., U.S.A. She cites many reasons for complexity in how black people identify, elucidating that, “Being a TCK should not be an excuse to stay indifferent to the matters of white privilege in a society. But, our experiences can help amplify [and] address injustices in the world, including generational effects/ consequences of colonialism, institutionalized racism and exploitation and how they have affected communities of color.” 66

Summer 2020 | www.CultursMag.com

Afro-Latin TCK Stephany Amalia agrees, saying “Let’s stop calling people by their skin color all together and let’s start defining them by ethnicity. Not black people as if we’re one big homogeneous group, but African-American, Surinamese, Nigerian, Ghanaian, etc. I never call myself black and don’t define myself by a simple skin color, but I’m proudly Surinamese/Venezuelan. My culture/attitude/norms/ values are related to my ethnicity and TCKness, not my skin color. Currently living in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Amilia thinks we should center ourselves locally. “You can’t compare the struggle of African-Americans to the struggle of Surinamese or Curaçaoans in The Netherlands for example,” she says. As a TCK I grew up in a very inclusive, international community, meaning that my experiences vary greatly from many sharing the same skin color as me, as my experiences have been positive.” Amilia feels that by defining self and others by skin color, individuals are reducing their humanity to a single element. “We’re more complicated than that,” she argues. Speaking to the complexity of the black immigrant experience in the U.S., Itoro Bassey and Ugo Edu bring it all full circle in their article “Anti-Blackness and the African Immigrant,” published on Medium. “We all know that whether it’s Okonkwo or Otis walking down the street, when the police officer stops and frisks you, or when Karen clutches her purse when she sees you, or when you get passed over for that job because your workplace feels more comfortable with Andy’s ‘style,’ it don’t matter if you’re from Lagos or from the U.S. south. That’s the black experience. Like it or not, Okonkwo and Otis are linked through a common struggle.” There’s so much more to be said about that struggle. Here, we bring six additional human stories from all backgrounds, nations and mixes and to try to put the experience into terms which we all can relate.


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Articles inside

Executive Strategist

2min
page 16

10 DAYS OF 10 THINGS - People of Color Need You To Do.

3min
pages 120-121

MUST READ: WHERE AM I FROM?

1min
page 104

The Must List

1min
pages 86-87

MUST HAVE: Hawaiian Prayer

1min
page 105

Life Mastery: YOGA-SCIENCE FOR LIFE MASTERY

3min
pages 116-118

Must Read: WHERE AM I FROM?

1min
page 104

OF TRADITION, FOOD AND CULTURE- Bridging cultures with food & customs.

4min
pages 56-58

Must Do: THE SUNDANCE EXPERIENCE

8min
pages 90-93

Anti-RACISM RESOURCES

1min
page 122

Technology: JESSICA MATTHEWS IS POWERFULLY UNCHARTED

4min
pages 106-111

HISTORY PRE-WRITTEN: TRANSGENERATIONAL TRANSFER OF TRAUMA, SYSTEMIC RACISM AND UNRESOLVED GRIEF.

6min
pages 112-115

I WANT TO BREATHE:

4min
pages 84-85

ACHIEVING THE AMERICAN DREAM

3min
pages 82-83

HOW DO YOU NAVIGATE LIFE- What Blackness Looks Like Series.

3min
pages 74-75

Must Know: TRUTH, JUSTICE AND THE AMERICAN WAY

3min
pages 88-89

HOW I AM STRUGGLING TO HAVE CONVERSATIONS ABOUT BEING BLACK- In my white relationships.

3min
pages 80-81

WHAT COLOR IS ACCEPTABLE?

6min
pages 76-79

WHAT IS BLACK?

2min
pages 66-73

THE DIANGELO FILES

7min
pages 62-65

African American Princesses

1min
pages 94-102

CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES DURING PANDEMIC

12min
pages 43-51

KEEPING HOPE ALIVE (DURING COVID-19)

3min
pages 52-55

ASIAN ALLIES: THE ACTIVISM WE NEED TODAY

5min
pages 59-61

THE DAWN OF A NEW DECADE

4min
pages 12-14
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