
Passing
Fannie
Nellie
Bly


 
 



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Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Highpoint
October 9, 2003
By Courtney Gaillard
.This is the final article in a series about the experiences of light-skinned
African-Americans and the prejudices they face.
My 4-year-old niece, Maddie, recently told her mother, “You’re
white, daddy is black, and I’m both. So what’s the big deal?”
When my sister-in-law Deborah shared this with me, we both laughed but
then agreed that she had a valid point – “out of the mouths
of babes.”
If only it were true. If only there was no “big deal” to be
made about race or skin tone or complexion in this country and abroad.
But there is a “big deal,’”as was made evident in the
previous stories in this series.
Cedric Herring, professor of sociology at the University of Illinois at
Chicago would like to see a colorblind society evolve eventually, but
he believes we are far from it happening. He writes about the fact that
race and skin color are very much still a big deal today in a book titled
“Skin Deep: How Race & Complexion Matter in the ‘Colorblind’
Era.”
“We all aspire to have a society where not only does race not matter
but color doesn’t matter. We now have this ideology that’s
prevalent in our society where people quote Dr. Martin Luther King’s
statement of judging not by the color of your skin but by the content
of your character. The problem is that you still have whopping differences
(between whites and blacks) in terms of earnings, educational attainment,
discriminatory treatment – all of these kinds of things that are
still clearly there,” Herring said.
In “Skin Deep,” he and the other authors tackle race and colorism
in American society. Colorism, which refers to the differential treatment
among people of the same race, is just another extension of making racial
distinctions, Herring said. He also pointed to findings from the most
recent U.S. Census, which for the first time allowed people to check all
races that apply to them and not just the “other” box. He
argued that this new option on the census is proof that many still feel
the importance of distinguishing themselves in terms of race and color.
“When you look at African-Americans, estimates are that 75 percent
of African-Americans are of mixed ancestry some way or another,”
said Herring, who is also a professor in the department of sociology at
the University of Illinois at Chicago. “What that does is it changes
the psychology. In other words, a person who comes of age under this new
system will not necessarily have formulated an identity that is so rigid
that they will say that they are black and nothing else.”
He argued that whites perpetuate stereotypes about color as much as blacks
do, although many whites today claim to see no racial differences between
the races. Herring said this belief system held by some whites prevents
them from seeing skin tone discrimination among blacks.
“We’re not at a point where we’re a colorblind society
at all....The reasons for passing have gone away in that the penalty for
being black isn’t nearly as high as it once was now that we have
civil rights laws,” Herring said.
One way to move beyond the fascination and fixation with skin tone is
for people to accept the fact the we all are inherently different, said
Earl Smith, dean of Wake Forest University’s sociology department.
“I think moving ahead is the quintessential question, and it’s
built around black people accepting that there are a variety of skin colors
and belief systems,” Smith said. “All of us are not alike,
but not being alike doesn’t make any set of traits better than another
set of traits.”
Since the Black Power movement of the 1960s ended, said Smith, the trend
of embracing black culture began to fade as well. He argued that it’s
no longer important to “look black” or “act black.”
The dominant ideology places more value on white skin and “white
behavior” as being the keys to success and achievement in this country.
“Blacks are just a part of this nation, and they have so many intertwined
histories, and miscegenation plays a big part in that, and until you accept
that, then there’s going to be problems,” Smith said. “That
reasoning comes from the way the larger society treats blacks who are
of different skin color, and it’s real, it’s very real.”
The fact that many people of African ancestry choose to ignore their heritage
and “pass” for white is also very real. Passing is something
that all the people profiled in the “Black Like Me” stories
said they never considered doing, although some of them were light enough
to pull it off if they wanted. Passing has always been an ugly little
secret in the black community, a secret that will be coming to the light,
no pun intended, more in the near future.
The movie “The Human Stain” starring Oscar winners Nicole
Kidman and Anthony Hopkins tells the story of a college professor who
hides the fact that he is black. The movie is based on Philip Roth’s
novel, which is based on a true story.
Brooke Kroeger also tackles the issue of passing through the stories of
“six present-day passers” in her new book, titled “Passing:
When People Can’t Be Who They Are.” She argues that so long
as racism and prejudice exists there will be people passing.
“These are not people who didn’t want to be who they were;
it’s that they found themselves in social situations, institutions
and environments that didn’t allow them to be who they were if they
wanted to achieve the ends they set out to achieve,” said Kroeger,
who is an associate journalism professor at New York University.
The difference between the passers of today versus passers during the
pre-Civil Rights Movement era, said Kroeger, is the absence of shame and
consequence when and if identity is revealed.
“I think the response today to an exposed passing is different.
It’s kind of a big ‘so what,’” Kroeger said.
David Matthews is one of the present-day passers whom Kroeger chronicles
in “Passing.” He tells Kroeger in her book that he passed
for white-Jewish for a period of time because he didn’t want his
life to be a social agenda struggle. For Matthews, who is the son of a
black father and Jewish mother, passing was the only way to secure friendships
in his youth growing up in Baltimore.
He was raised by his father, Ralph Matthews, who was a well-known writer
for the Afro American newspaper, based in Baltimore. Ralph Matthews divorced
his wife after she gave birth to their son, and she spent the rest of
her life in Israel.
A portion of the chapter from “Passing” on David Matthews
Matthews’ story is one of many passing stories in Kroeger’s
book. She also speaks of other situations where people passed –
for other religions, sexuality, class and gender – in recent times.
Kroeger points out that passing is no longer just about hiding race. But
it remains about concealing a truth that many still believe is better
off hidden from the rest of the world.
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