
Passing
Fannie
Nellie
Bly


 
 



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November 10, 2003
Written by RICHARD JEROME; Reported by EVE HEYN
As Coleman Silk in the film version of Philip Roth's novel THE HUMAN STAIN,
Anthony Hopkins plays a light-skinned African-American who pretends to
be white to avoid '40s racism. Unimaginable in this more tolerant age?
Not so, says New York University professor Brooke Kroeger, author of PASSING:
When People Can't Be Who They Are, a study of people today who try to
"pass" as a different race, religion or sexual preference. Like
the individuals from her book featured here, most deny their true identities
for acceptance and opportunity and adventure, says Kroeger, 54. But they
pay a price. "You have to lie," she says, "That has a way
of poisoning the soul."
LIVING A GREAT WHITE LIE
David Matthews has always admired his father, Ralph Jr., a prominent African-American
journalist. But growing up in Baltimore, he treated his dad's identity
like a shameful secret. Why? Strangers assumed the light-skinned Matthews
was white — and he liked it that way. "I'd see black kids pulled
over by the cops just for walking in white neighborhoods," says Matthews,
36, a waiter and aspiring screenwriter. "No way did I want that for
a life."
Instead, Matthews passed himself off as Jewish. It wasn't such a stretch
— his mother, Robin Golden, was a Jew who emigrated to Israel when
he was an infant. Raised by the divorced Ralph, now 76, in a black neighborhood,
David attended integrated schools, where he found he had more in common
with white kids, who like him preferred the Beatles to the Jackson 5.
He dated white girls, but rarely brought any friends home. Ralph says
he was unaware that David was "actively campaigning" as Jewish.
"Had I known, I would have been less than thrilled," he says.
"He had too rich a heritage to throw away."
It was only after his son left home, traveled and graduated from American
University in Washington D.C. that he finally embraced that heritage.
"In other places, it's cool if you're more than one thing,"
says Matthews, who now lives in Brooklyn. But while he speaks proudly
of being of mixed race, he has another identity crisis. "People don't
believe me," he says. "I talk about my father all the time —
but I'll have to look at a friend and say, 'Will you tell them my dad's
black?'"
YEARNING TO FIT IN
Vivian Sanchez has long been conflicted about her working-class Puerto
Rican roots. "I don't like to be stereotyped," admits Sanchez,
31, a technical trainer for a Manhattan investment firm. Growing up in
Middletown, N.Y., that's just how she felt. Alienated from wealthier Anglo
peers, Sanchez instead briefly hung out with black and Hispanic dropouts
who did drugs and spoke street slang. She outgrew that crowd by college
— then took a religious journey. Disenchanted with Christianity
— but with a strong belief in God — Sanchez was intrigued
by Judaism. She joined a Jewish study group in 2000 and converted, adopting
the modest skirts and blouses required of Orthodox women. But her surname
marked her an outsider; marriageable men literally walked away. And so
Sanchez passed — as a descendant of Spanish Jews or Sephardim. She
felt some of the spiritual kinship she'd sought, but says it also felt
"horrible" to lie about her family and to stifle her true self.
After a romance with an Orthodox lawyer, she now dates a non-Jewish former
coworker, who challenged her adopted beliefs. The events of 9/11 dashed
her faith entirely. "I no longer believe in anything," she says.
Sanchez still calls herself Jewish but she's no longer observant and now
favors tank tops and high heels. She also has a new network of educated
Latina friends. "I realize I'm an articulate, intelligent woman who
also speaks slang and listens to R&B," she says. "For the
first time, I feel free to be me."
STAIN STAR: BLACK, WHITE AND PROUD
Growing up in Brooklyn, Wentworth Miller never thought much about race.
That is, until he gave a sixth grade report on his family tree and his
girlfriend — who didn't realize his dad was African-American —
dumped him. Her exit line, as he remembers it, was: "N — go
back to the cotton fields." Other than that, Miller, 31 — who
plays the younger version of Anthony Hopkins' character in THE HUMAN STAIN
— has felt comfortable in his own skin. "Passing has never
shown up on my radar," he says. "I'm part of generation where
I can be who I am." That would be the Princeton-educated son of a
now-divorced black father an white mother. STAIN was his first movie and
an education in the racism of another era. "[My character] wants
the freedom and opportunities that came automatically to a white man in
the '40s," he says. "But he's jumping into another prison of
his own making."
Copyright PEOPLE Magazine, 2003
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