Re: [NewPacifica] Fade to Black




Joseph Wanzala <wanzala@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:             
  http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/27/opinion/27dilday.html
   
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  By K. A. DILDAY
  Published: February 27, 2008
    London
  I'M black again. I was black in Mississippi in the 1970s but sometime in the 
1980s I became African-American, with a brief pause at Afro-American. Someone, 
I think it was Jesse Jackson, in the days when he had that kind of clout, 
managed to convince America that I preferred being African-American. I don't. 
  Now I live in Britain where I'm black again. Blacks in Britain come from all 
over, although many are from the former colonies. According to the last census, 
about half of the British people who identify as black say they are black 
Caribbean, about 40 percent consider themselves black African, and the rest 
just feel plain old black. Black Brits are further divided by ancestral country 
of origin, yet they are united under the term black British ? often expanded to 
include British Asians from the Indian subcontinent. 
  The term African-American was contrived to give black Americans a sense of 
having a historical link to Africa, since one of slavery's many unhappy 
legacies is that most black Americans don't know particulars about their 
origins. Black Americans whose ancestors arrived after slavery and who can 
pinpoint their country of origin are excluded from the definition ? which is 
why, early in his campaign, people said Barack Obama wasn't really 
African-American. Yet, since he has one parent from the African continent and 
one from the American continent, he is explicitly African-American. 
  Distinguishing between American black people based on their ancestors' 
arrival date ignores the continuum of experience that transcends borders and 
individual genealogies and unites black people all over the world. Yes, 
scientists have shown that black means nothing as a biological description, but 
it remains an important signal in social interaction. Everywhere I travel, from 
North Africa to Europe to Asia, dark-skinned people approach me and, usually 
gently but sometimes aggressively, establish a bond.
  When, early on in the race for the Democratic nomination, people wondered if 
black Americans would vote for Mr. Obama, I never doubted. During the last two 
years I've learned to decipher his name in almost any pronunciation, because on 
finding out that I'm an American, all other black people I meet, whether they 
are Arabic-speaking Moroccans in Casablanca, French-speaking African 
mobile-phone-store clerks in the outer boroughs of Paris, or thickly accented 
Jamaican black Brits, ask me eagerly about him. Black people all over the world 
feel a sense of pride in his accomplishment. 
  It's hard to understand why black Americans ever tried to use the term 
African-American to exclude people. The black American community's social and 
political power derives from its inclusiveness. Everyone who identifies as 
black has traditionally been welcomed, no matter their skin color or date of 
arrival. In Britain, in contrast, dark-skinned people who trace their relatives 
to particular former colonies can be cliquish. Beyond the fact that blacks make 
up a smaller share of the population here, this regional identity may be a 
reason that the British black community isn't as powerful a social and 
political force.
  I've never minded not knowing who my ancestors are beyond a few generations. 
My partner is an Englishman whose family tree is the sort that professional 
genealogists post on the Internet because it can be traced back to the first 
king of England in the 11th century. To me, it's more comforting to know that, 
through me, our children will be black, with all of the privileges and pains.
  On Mr. Obama's behalf, American blacks have set aside their exclusive label. 
Polls show that about 80 percent of blacks who have voted in the Democratic 
primaries have chosen him. And all of the black people in the mountains of 
Morocco, the poor suburbs of Paris, the little villages in Kenya and the 
streets of London are cheering Mr. Obama's victories because they see him as 
one of their own. 
  Black Americans should honor that. It's time to retire the term 
African-American and go back to black. 
    K. A. Dilday is a columnist for the online magazine Open Democracy.
   
   


  

                         

       
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