They're Not All Blond and Blue-Eyed
Mixed-race Scandinavians challenge stereotypes
By
Emily Helgersen
One day last December I was shopping at Toronto's Kensington Market
and saw a car with a sticker of the Danish flag on the back. As I
stopped to look more closely, a young mulatto girl came up to me and
asked, Can I help you?
Curious to know what her connection to Denmark might be, I said, I
noticed you have a sticker of the Danish flag on the back of your
car.
My mom's Danish, she replied.
Oh, I'm of Norwegian descent. Our flag is just like yours except
that it has a blue cross. (Denmark's flag is red with a white
cross, Norway's red with a blue cross outlined in white.)
Just then an older White woman who had apparently been listening to
the conversation walked over, smiled, and started talking to me in
what must have been Danish (Danish, Norwegian and Swedish are so similar
they're often called the dialects of the Scandinavian language). I
apologized and told her I didn't speak Norwegian.
I wished a Merry Christmas to the mother and daughter, and we parted
ways. I felt somewhat ashamed of myself for automatically presuming
that the girl was NOT Danish. After all, thanks to some Italian and
Irish ancestry I'm hardly the typical blond-haired blue-eyed Scandinavian.
But as I pondered the matter further, I realized there were a number
of mixed-race Scandinavians in my midst. A children's group to which
I once brought my niece included a small and very pretty mulatto girl
with a Swedish mother. My best friend on a summer exchange program
to Quebec was a young woman whose mother was from Sweden and father
from Egypt (for the purpose of this essay, I'll go by the Canadian
government's current classification of Arabs as non-White, even if
some of them are physically indistinguishable from Greeks or Southern
Italians). My family is no stranger to interracial relationships either.
A cousin of mine married a Black American man and has two biracial
sons.
_____________________________
I'm hardly the typical blond-haired
blue-eyed Scandinavian.
_____________________________
Scandinavia boasts several well-known individuals of mixed heritage
in its ranks. Among them are singer Nenah Cherry (Swedish mother,
African father), Kersti Bowser (a Black-Swedish model who joked she
went to tanning salons to keep her Swedish side in check);
and Rikke Roenholt (Danish mother, Ghanaian father), a runner who
will be representing Denmark in the 2008 Olympics. Famous White Scandinavians
who have been involved in interracial unions include Icelandic singer
Bjork (had a relationship with a Black man named Goldie which caused
an anti-miscegenation fan of hers to commit suicide on videotape),
Swedish actress May Britt (wife of musician Sammy Davis Jr.), Swedish
actor Dolph Lundgren (ex-lover of Grace Jones), and Denmark's Prince
Joachim (formerly married to a woman of Austrian and Chinese descent).
Any discussion on mixed-race Scandinavians would be incomplete without
a mention of Greenland. An overseas territory of Denmark, Greenland
was colonized by that nation in the 1700s. Most Greenlanders are of
mixed Danish and Inuit descent. Recent genetic studies have shown
that as with Latin America, Greenland's present population resulted
from unions of European men with native women. However, while colonization
in Latin America led to an almost complete Westernization of that
region (the majority of Latin American mestizos speak Spanish as their
first language and don't identify at all as Indian), Greenlanders
have kept much more of their original culture. For example, Greenlandic,
an Inuit language, is the mother tongue of most Greenlanders, though
many know Danish too. On the other hand, the bulk of Greenland's population
belongs to the Lutheran Church, as does Denmark's.
At an individual level, the degree to which mixed-race Scandinavians
retain their culture varies. My above-mentioned friend in Quebec,
for instance, spent long periods of time as a child in Sweden and
spoke fluent Swedish. One marker of Scandinavian heritage
is Lutheranism, even if not all Scandinavians are Lutheran and many
of those who are are not particularly religious. Here again, families
differ. Though her father was Muslim, my Swedish-Egyptian friend was
raised Lutheran. However, a Finnish-Canadian colleague married to
a Filipino woman was bringing up his children in his wife's Catholic
faith.
_____________________________
One marker of
Scandinavian heritage is Lutheranism.
_____________________________
I would like to end with an interview with a real-life mixed-race
Scandinavian: writer Heidi Durrow, author of the book Light-skinned-ed
Girl. Check out her website at www.heidiwdurrow.com - and read her
answers to my questions.
Q: From what I understand, your mother is Danish and your father
African-American. How and where did your parents meet?
A: My parents (my mother is from Herning, Denmark and my father
was originally from Texas) met on an American Air Force base in Germany.
My mom was working as a nanny to an American family - she wanted to
practice her English while she earned some money to go back to school.
Q: Where were you born?
A: I was born in Seattle, WA at the Swedish Hospital. Both
my brothers (one older and one younger) were born in Herning. I am
jealous of this to this day - but tease them that they cannot ever
be President of the US because they were born on foreign soil. Silly,
right?
Q: Do you speak Danish fluently? If so, is it your first language
(meaning the first language you learned as a child)?
A: Yes, I would say I'm fluent in Danish - though each time
I've gone back as an adult I hear more of an accent developing -an
unintelligible one at that-a strange mixture of American and ????
Also, my language is kind of dated and I sound like my mother from
forty years ago - I haven't updated my slang-and I haven't updated
my accent to go with the Copenhageners -but they are kind to me when
I go and don't make fun of me - hee hee.
Q: Have you spent long periods of time in Denmark?
A: As a child we spent long summers and holidays there. Recently,
I received a grant from the American Scandinavian Foundation to do
research for a book I'm writing. I spent a month in Copenhagen in
a little apartment I rented. I spent time at the libraries and doing
interviews and also with my family. It was an amazing experience to
be part of Danish life for so long as an adult on my own terms.
Q: Would you say that when growing up your father's or your
mother's background had the greatest influence in your home?
A: My mother's background was the most important. We spoke
only Danish with my mother until I was about 11 or 12. When my dad
would come home from work, we would speak English around him but if
he wasn't in the room it was Danish again. We ate Danish food, celebrated
holidays the Danish way - and I think were raised with a Danish sensibility
- the bad part: Janteloven - but also something more intangible that
I think people here would say is European but to me seems specifically
Danish.
Q: Were you raised in the Church of Denmark (the Lutheran Church,
that is)?
A: I was christened Lutheran, but did not have a confirmation.
It was a great wish to have one as a child, but by the time I was
14, we were in the US and it would be another several years before
we could AFFORD for me to travel to Denmark again.
Q: How do you identify ethnically now?
A: My ethnic identification has gone through many changes.
For the last long while, I have embraced saying that I am biracial
and bicultural - African-American and Danish. I think this specificity
annoys some people - some who think, get over it you're black since
you don't look white and also those who think: but you're American
and that whole Danish thing is just quaint. I am tired of thinking
what they are thinking and just say what is the truth now.
Q: Do you find that racism is widespread in Denmark? Have you
ever encountered racism in that country?
A: I feel lucky not have experienced racism in Denmark. I was
either too ignorant to recognize it or I have been shielded from it.
That is not to say that I haven't been privy to people making comments
about me. Comments like there are more and more of THOSE people
coming - an overhead remark when I had lunch with a cousin -
I assume they thought I was Arab? Turkish? A foreigner who was now
living in Denmark? There is a lot of discrimination against them.
It's disturbing. My brothers have experienced racism, I think - but
those are their own stories. I think ignorance about racial difference
is widespread in Denmark, unfortunately. It's a small land and for
a long time they haven't had contact with others - but
I think it is changing. There are more and more mixed-race Danes who
are in the media and I think that makes it all less strange.
Q: In the past few years the Danish government made news because
it tightened its immigration laws, making it more difficult to obtain
political asylum and bring foreign-born spouses to that country. As
a person of part non-European ancestry, what did you think of these
new laws?
A: The new anti-immigrant laws are disturbing and not at all
Danish - Danes have always been and I believe will again be free-spirited
and forward-thinking in regards to race. That's my belief.
|

|
Emily Helgersen is a secretary, translator and musician based
in Toronto, Canada. In her spare time, she likes to write about
music, religion or anything else that strikes her fancy. In
this picture she's enjoying her spare time by holding her nephew
Tommy.
|
Go
to Urban Mozaik Magazine
This
website: Copyright © 2008 Dream World Media, LLC. / Urban Mozaik
Magazine. All rights reserved. The opinions expressed in Urban Mozaik
Magazine are not necessarily those of Urban Mozaik Magazine and the
publisher cannot be held responsible for them. This website/publication,
in whole or in part, may not be reproduced without written permission
from the publisher.