re: jennifer beals

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Last night I went to hear Jennifer Beals speak at the NY Times Center.  Um….amazing!! I was mere feet away from her.  She was beautiful, radiant, kind, eloquent.  Everything I thought she’d be.  But better.  I got a little emotional when she first walked out.  Jennifer Beals is to me what I seem to have become for a few people.  When I realized I was biracial and that that actually meant something to me and means a lot in this country, I was left feeling a little lost.  I mean here I’d been thinking I knew myself quite well, knew what I wanted, knew where I wanted to go, and all of sudden this paradigm shift had me questioning everything.  I was all fired-up about my discovery, but I didn’t know what to do with it.  Someone suggested I watch The L Word because Jennifer Beals’ character, Bette Porter, was biracial and it was actually a part of the story line.  I watched it and I knew I wasn’t crazy.  I knew that it was ok to embark on this journey.  I knew that who I had an inkling that I really was, well, I really was, and I was not alone.  I saw myself reflected in the world and I had a sense of my right to be.  I learned to say that I’m not “exclusively black” and that phrase has become invaluable.  For these reasons Jennifer Beals is my biracial hero.  Last night put all of that in perspective.  So, if I’ve helped anyone stand firmly in their biracial truth, J.B. is to thank for that.  So grateful!!

 

 

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Googling “why blacks hate mulattos” also led someone to this blog today.  I would love to hear Jennifer Beals’ opinion on that one.  And I’m a little curious as to what instigated that particular search.

little hans

I love this story! I did a google search hoping to find big Hans, but came up empty handed.  I wonder how the rest of his school years went….

Little Hans

In Munich one morning last week, a little boy named Hans Koegel appeared at the doorway of the Schule in der Blu-menstrasse and nervously entered. Like other children arriving for the first day of school, he clung tightly to his mother, and it was not for several awkward moments that he finally relaxed enough to smile tentatively at his classmates. But even after he did so, his mother and teacher continued to watch him closely.

For several months, parents and teachers all over West Germany have been worried about children like Hans. He is a mulatto, one of some 3,000 who are starting to school for the first time. Almost all are the children of Negro G.I.s, and most are illegitimate. In a nation that still remembers the preachments of Hitler’s Master Race, they were expected to present something of a problem.

Last week, school principals waited worriedly for reports of discrimination or childish cruelty. But as the first days passed, there was only silence. Not one child was singled out for teasing because of his color; not one teacher refused to work in mixed classes; not one Nordic mother took her own child out of school in protest.

As for little Hans, he had become something of a tease himself. His victim: a young towhead by the name of Tűrauf, which Hans thinks is howlingly funny. Tűrauf means “Open the door.”

 

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haters

aunizvpxmm6y1kglcz75ysrho1_400 I’ve gotten some new haters on youtube in the last few days.  I feel two ways about this: 1) irritated, 2) pleased.  There I go being a constant contradiction again, which I’m beginning to think just goes along with being black and white in America.  The general notion is that the two are so different and don’t mix, and here I (we) am (are) going around being both simultaneously.  I’m bound to contradict myself a lot while holding two things equally relevant, valid, important, impactful, etc.  Anyway, I was feeling kind of neglected by the haters.  They challenge me, they teach me, they send me new viewers.  Some of these haters call me a tragic mulatto. Others say that “biracial” doesn’t exist.  Some say I’m ugly and stupid.  I never even contemplate letting them get under my skin.  They certainly can ruffle my feathers, I’m only human after all, but that’s surface stuff.  Mostly they strengthen my passionate desire to answer the call to:

 

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to let others know that

 

 

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and that

 

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but ultimately, haters (who are probably not reading this)

 

 

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mariah carey

 

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i just posted a video on youtube (http://www.youtube.com/user/tiffdjones) in which i say something ignorant about mariah carey. in my attempt to eradicate my ignorance while repenting my judgement i came across this blog post…

http://abagond.wordpress.com/2008/11/21/the-blackness-of-mariah-carey/

here’s an excerpt:

Here is what Carey told JET magazine in 1999:

Ethnically, I’m a person of mixed race. My father’s mother was African-American. His father was from Venezuela. My mother is Irish. I see myself as a person of color who happens to be mixed with a lot of things… No matter what you say, when someone asks you the question ‘What are you?’ and you say ‘Black’ and you look mixed, they’re going to ask what you’re mixed with. That’s what always happens.

She sees this sort of questioning as racist:

What I find racist and unfair is that if someone’s half Chinese and half Italian, that’s two different races, why are they not forced to constantly define what they are? When it comes to a Black and a White thing, people are up in arms.

 

i really enjoyed reading it. i love the last bit of the excerpt. i mean, i doubt that people go around one-dropping norah and lourdes.

 

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carol channing

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In her autobiography, Just Lucky I Guess, the 81-year-old performer told the story of the day she learned that she is biracial.

She recalled that she was 16 years old and heading to college when her mother told her that she was “part Negro.”

“I’m only telling you this,” Channing recalls her mother, Peggy, saying, “because the Darwinian law shows that you could easily have a Black baby.”

Her mother continued by explaining Carol’s unique look. She told the doe-eyed performer that because of her heritage that was “why my eyes were bigger than hers (I wasn’t aware of this) and why I danced with such elasticity and why I had so many of the qualities that made me me.”

The revelation didn’t bother Channing, who said, “I thought I had the greatest genes in showbiz.”

George Channing, Carol’s father, was the son of a German American father and a Black mother. While still very young, his mother, who worked as a domestic, moved him and his sister from his birthplace of Augusta, GA, to Providence, RI, where she thought people would never recognize his “full features.”

Channing’s paternal grandmother didn’t raise her father and his sister because she “didn’t want anyone to see her around her children” because she was “colored,” the performer surmised.

 

 

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TRANSCRIPTS

CNN LARRY KING LIVE

Interview With Carol Channing

Aired November 27, 2002 – 21:00 ET

…….

KING: Lets start early in that truth. Your father was black. 

CHANNING: No, he was not black. I wish I had his picture. He was — he was a — his skin was the color of mine. I don’t know maybe. Yes, it’s all right. Well any, no. My father — you read the tabloids, don’t you? 

KING: No, it says in my notes your beloved father, George Channing, a newspaper editor, renowned Christian Science lecturer listed as colored on his birth certificate.

CHANNING: Yes, and the place burned down, but nobody ever knew that. But I know it. Every time I start to sing or dance, I know it, and I’m proud of it.

KING: So he was black?

CHANNING: No, He had in — there was a picture in our family album and my grandmother said — I never saw them. My grandfather was Nordic German and my grandmother was in the dark. And they said no that was — she was — and I’m so proud of it I can’t tell you. When our champion gave me that last third (UNINTELLIGIBLE) on “Hello Dolly!” Again. No white woman can do it like I did. KING: So you’re proud of your mixed heritage?

CHANNING: Very, when I found out. I was 16-years-old and my mother told me. And you know, only the reaction on me was, Gee, I got the greatest genes in show business.

KING: Some people years ago discovering that might have been disturbed by it?

CHANNING: Yes, years ago because when I found out about it, you don’t want to do that.

KING: You don’t say it.

CHANNING: You don’t say it. There’s a lot of it down South.

KING: People are ashamed of it.

CHANNING: I’d proud of it.

KING: I’m glad to hear it. 

CHANNING: I really am. I mean look, what makes you, you? You don’t know. None of us knows our heritage. Not in the United States. 

KING: We’re all immigrants. 

CHANNING: Exactly, this is the changing face of America. I’m part of it. Isn’t it wonderful? 

KING: You damn right. 

CHANNING: I’m young again.

………

Tiffany: She’s proud, but she can’t name “it”….

a biracial committee in 2009

Remember how I discovered that until the 1990’s biracial described groups of black and white people, not individuals or people of mixed-race?  Well one of those groups still exists.  In fact 6 of them do in Florida.
Orange school desegregation: What is biracial committee?

What is it required to do? Its bylaws require members to hold an annual meeting in September and to meet on a regular basis on a schedule that they set themselves. The members are also to meet whenever the committee chairman or superintendent needs them to, such as to review the attendance lines for new schools that open in the fall.

Why are members required to be only black or white? When a group of parents filed a suit against the district, Hispanics were not included in the lawsuit. Blacks were separated from whites, and several black parents sued for their children’s rights to equal access to public schools.

What are the details of the case? A group of Orange parents first sued the district in 1962, spurred by its refusal to let Evelyn R. Ellis attend Boone High. Her father, John P. Ellis, was president of the Orange County NAACP. The lawsuit evolved over the years, with different parties, including the NAACP, signing on. In 1964, a judge declared Orange must desegregate its schools. During that time, Orange often ignored the order and at times deliberately flouted it. In 1971, for example, School Board members voted to go to jail rather than accept busing for racial balance. Later, members agreed to move 900 students around the county. Orange has largely ended that practice for all but about six schools.

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/education/orl-asecracebox08040809apr08,0,4849860.story

 

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one of the first articles of it’s kind

This article is a little long, but I find it very interesting.  I especially love the statistics on white mom/black dad vs black mom/white dad births.  The very first story told by a mother reminds me of the summer when I was 7 or 8 and my new “best friend” told me she couldn’t play with me anymore because I’m black.  I also like the letter to the editor included at the end.  I think this story often gets told today in a needlessly somber tone.  The picture at the end is just cute (you know I like to include a picture with every post), it isn’t related to the article. I couldn’t resist a munchkin mixie and a cavalier king charles spaniel. The stuff my dreams are made of!

For Mothers of Biracial Children, Prejudice Mars the Pride

Meredith Higgins remembers the first time she crossed the color line for the sake of her daughter, Anna – the child of a black father and a white mother. Higgins asked a neighbor, a white woman like herself, if the woman’s daughter could play with her 5-year-old. The neighbor said it wasn’t possible just then but promised to call to get the two girls together.

She didn’t call, and when Higgins ran into the woman at a supermarket, she was shunned. Higgins later saw the woman’s daughter playing with other children – all of them white.

“I guess I would say this is one of those kinds of experiences that I predicted was possible,” Higgins said. “I did not explain {to my daughter} that it might be racial . . . . It was more like a disappointment.”

On Mother’s Day 1991, an increasing number of women in the Washington area and across the country are mothers to biracial children, and many of them are forced to grapple with discrimination and racism to protect their sons and daughters. These mothers say they suffer stares in shopping malls and restaurants, snide comments, the coolness of relatives who first don’t understand why they would marry outside their race and then reject the children.

And after all of that, they say, they ultimately must face the questions from their children: “Who am I? What am I? Where do I fit?”

The children “do have problems explaining to friends who they are,” said Janice Lorenz, of Prince George’s County, the black mother of two children whose father is white. “I tell them, `You know you are an interracial child, and for some people that may be a problem, but you are who you are.’ The natural instinct is for mothers to protect. The bottom line is we can’t always protect, so we have to equip.”

According to the National Center for Health Statistics, the number of births to interracial couples has increased dramatically since 1968, when such figures were first recorded. Twenty-three years ago, 7,244 babies were born to white mothers and black fathers. By 1988, the latest figures available, that number had jumped to 33,875.

The increase was as sharp for births to black mothers and white fathers. In 1968, there were 2,375 of these babies; by 1988, the number had grown to 17,070. There have been similar increases in the number of births to Asians, Hispanics and American Indians who had children with whites. Most of the interracial children, according to the statistics, are born to black and white couples.

The latest census figures documenting the number of interracial families in the Washington area are not yet available, but officials say the number of interracial families here is rising steadily. Many parents of biracial children say they have moved to this area because of its ethnic diversity and because it seems more tolerant.

During the past few years, several organizations have sprung up across the country to provide support for the swell of interracial families. Many mothers use them so that their children can see there are others like them.

“The mother has a lot of responsibility trying to help the child deal” with being biracial, said Godfrey Franklin, a psychologist at the University of West Florida who counsels interracial couples. “She is the one who usually must deal with all the emotions and the pain and agony from Day One.”

Several mothers of biracial children in the Washington area say they have become bridges between races at a time when race relations seem to be deteriorating. “Under this roof,” says Lorenz, “there is a loving coexistence of two races.”

In interviews, four women talked about their special kind of mothering.

One morning out of the blue, Lori Darden’s 3-year-old daughter announced she wanted her toast black like her daddy. Darden, who is white, was startled but then explained to her daughter her uniqueness.

Darden, 30, took a cup of black coffee and a cup of cream and then poured them together. The liquid became brown like her daughter, Leandra, who could see why she is not exactly the color of her parents.

Darden, who lives in Springfield, says people often stare at her, Leandra and a 10-month-old son, Jay Spenser, and some “ignorant” people tell her how nice it is for her to have adopted black babies.

“It makes me so angry,” she says. “I carried these children for nine months. The point is they are my children.”

Darden, editor of the Fairfax County employees newsletter, says something as simple as buying toys is a challenge.

“I would love to go into a Toys R Us. But you go in those stores and you see black dolls and white dolls,” she says. “My daughter is not really either of those. She is both.” Darden has found catalogues that provide toys for multiracial children. In some cases, parents can send in samples of the color for the toys.

Having biracial children, says Darden, has made her more sensitive to race issues. “As a white woman, I encounter very little prejudice. Every day of my life is easy. You can go through life with blinders on and think the world is hunky-dory. But when you have a biracial child, you see how people react to blacks.”

Sometimes, she says, it hurts.

Carol Anderson, 47, a tiny white woman with cropped hair, has two daughters. One is the color of ivory and has curly brown hair. She has Anderson’s facial features. The other is bronze, the color of caramel. She looks nothing like her mother.

Hilary, 17, and her sister, Caroline, 15, call themselves black. Caroline, the darker daughter, says she likes to shock people. “When I walk in someplace with my mother, I like to say, `Mom,’ and people say, `Huh?’ “

Anderson says it doesn’t matter what her daughters want to be; if they want to be black, she says, that is their choice. Most important, she has tried to teach them to be comfortable with themselves.

A lawyer and development consultant who directs Capitol Hill Group Ministries, Anderson says she has always been a political person, a rebel, a woman who was not “enamored” of her white culture.

“You have a handful of mothers here who have chosen to make a positive statement across race lines,” says Anderson, who lives in Northeast Washington. “As W.E.B. Du Bois said, the issue of the 21st century is the issue of the color line. And I believe that wholeheartedly.”

Over the years, Anderson recalls, there have been a few poignant times when the color line issue was raised between Caroline and Hilary.

Once, she says, she and her daughters were driving across the Mexican border into the United States when a customs official singled out Caroline. As Anderson and Hilary, the fair-skinned daughter, waited in the car, the agent interrogated Caroline about her nationality. Anderson remained silent.

When the family pulled away, Anderson said she discussed what happened and her daughter knew she had been targeted because she was the only visibly black person in the car.

Meredith Higgins has made sure her daughter, Anna, 10, knows the strong roots of both her cultures.

Of the grandmother who came from Germany as an orphan. Of her father’s ancestors, who were slaves and who graduated from universities in the late 1800s, when that was unusual for blacks.

“The challenges are simply to make sure that you are not completely immersed in your own ethnic background to the detriment of the child,” says Higgins, a senior manager of a health association.

Higgins, 48, says she feels blessed to be living in the Washington area because of its diversity. Her family attends All Souls Church in the District, where there are a large number of families with biracial children.

At home, Higgins says, her family doesn’t concentrate on being different. Anna, who is the color of honey, skips across the living room of the Silver Spring home. With both arms, she squeezes her mother. “She’s a wonderful mother,” she announces. She turns to her black father and kisses him on the cheek. “We’re normal. We’re happy,” she says.

“Years ago,” says Higgins, “people would say if you are in an interracial marriage, your children would suffer.”

Anna chimes in: “I don’t see me suffering. We’re normal. We really are.”

Janice Lorenz, 42, sat across from her son recently and tried to get to the bottom of why the 14-year-old said he sometimes feels self-conscious about being in certain public situations with his white father.

He talked of how when he stands in line with his father at McDonald’s the cashier assumes they are not together, and how people stare when he calls to his father across a store.

“I feel proud of who I am, but I have difficulty explaining,” he says to his mother. “You know how you say I should feel proud when people ask if he’s my dad? I feel it’s hard to explain.”

Lorenz, a transportation planner in Northern Virginia, listens patiently and encourages her son to dig deeper into his feelings.

“You are assuming the worst,” she tells him. “That’s not healthy . . . . You don’t have to defend who you and your dad are.”

DeNeen L. Brown. “For Mothers of Biracial Children, Prejudice Mars the Pride.” The Washington Post

This was posted a week later…

– Theresa Stringfellow How About the Upside? When we participated in an interview for your Mother’s Day story on mothers of biracial children {May 12}, we didn’t deny the few negative experiences. But while your story did have some high notes, we thought this would be a Mother’s Day piece about special mothers of dynamic children. Instead, the article perpetuated the misconception that interracial relationships are always fraught with problems. Also, contrary to your headline, mothers of biracial children would never let racism or prejudice lessen their pride. These mothers deserve praise, and they find their rewards in the wonderful children they raise.

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jalopies

I’ve never heard this one before…..

Half Black Geese

Monday, Jun. 28, 1937

Sirs:

Relative your article TIME, June 7 on the word “jalopy” and Webster R. Kent’s comments (TIME, June 21), I think you are both in error. Approximately ten years ago while in a Los Angeles café with the late Herbert Somborn, ex-husband of Gloria Swanson, approximately eight mulatto dancing girls appeared. Mr. Somborn exclaimed: “What beautiful jalopies!” Pressing him for information, he stated that a jalopy was anything half black and that the word originated in a certain part of Africa, where plurals are unknown, and a jalopy is a African half black geese.

weheartit.com

In case you hadn’t noticed, I spend a lot of time surfing the internets and I easily become addicted to entertaining websites. Thank goodness the addictions are usually short-lived.  Here’s the latest: http://weheartit.com/.  I’m still not exactly sure how it works just yet, but there are SO many fun things to look at.  This is the first picture I saw on there…

snow white wardrobeIt was love at first sight! I have a little confession to make…. I LOVE Snow White!! She’s my favorite Disney character. It’s always felt a little “wrong” for me as a (formerly) one-dropped biracial girl to love someone named Snow White. Identity issues much? I don’t think so, but I assumed everyone else would.

Halle Berry 17 years ago

It’s hard to believe that Halle Berry’s been on my radar screen for about 20 years now.  I have lots of respect for her, so I am in no way picking on her (or her mother) by questioning some of the things she said in this article from Ebony magazine in 1992. I wonder if she still feels the same way today. I wonder if Nahla has had an impact on Halle’s concept of black, white, and biracial. I wonder if I’ll ever get to have a conversation with her about it!

Norment, Lynn. “Halle Barry: strictly business about show business.” Ebony. 1992

Confronting life’s obstacles is nothing new for Berry, who overcame the potentially damaging problem of being born to a Black father and White mother in a racist society.

Berry’s father left when Halle was 4, and she and her sister, Heidi, were raised by her mother, Judith. Race was never a problem, Berry says, growing up in Cleveland’s inner-city neighborhoods. All that changed when they moved to a racially mixed suburb and young Halle began hearing the taunts–“half-breed,” “mulatto” and “Oreo cookie”–and wondered what it all meant.

Judith Berry didn’t mince words.

“I’m White, and you are Black,” was her mother’s explanation. “Sure I can say that I’m biracial and technically I am,” says Halle, “but, as my mother said to me: ‘What do you see when you look in the mirror? You see what everyone else sees. They don’t know who your mother is, and they aren’t going to care.””

Since that conversation, Berry has called herself Black and now sees benefits from both of her heritages. She has little sympathy, she says, for individuals who use their biracial backgrounds as excuses for their troubles.

“I think the problems are made worse when people get on talk shows and make statements like, ‘I had a hard time because I was caught in the middle,” she says. “It doesn’t have to be that way. I think being biracial is one of the best things in the world.”

Norment, Lynn. “Halle Barry: strictly business about show business.” Ebony. 1992

I don’t really appreciate the “potentially damaging problem of being born to a Black father and White mother” statement. To me it seems like Norment had “tragic mulatto” on her mind when she wrote this.  When I look at that picture of Halle Berry and her mother, I can see the resemblance. I wonder if what other people see and care about still matters more to people than what they as an individual see and care about in terms of their own sense of self. I mean, my retort would be “when I look in the mirror I see you somewhere in my reflection, and why should I not care who my mother is because ‘they’ won’t?”