What
Color Is Your Momma?
To Condition or To Not Condition Our Multi-racial Children
By
Heike Boehnke-Sharp
Are we pushing too hard to educate our mixed-race children,
a White mother wonders.
Today we were in the local newsroom, being interviewed as a family
for a Sunday insert. We were picked because we had an interesting
story as a family, and because we are a Multi family.
Of course, in our case we are both multi-racial and -ethnic. The journalist
asked us how we felt about raising our daughter here in the U.S. not
asking about the color issue, but insinuating it. Fine with me, since
one of my missions is to educate the masses that there are multi
families out there that are fully functional. Of course, running a
story on my family is the perfect outlet.
I told the journalist that we do everything possible to raise our
daughter European, that we teach her three languages, and that we
try to uphold traditions from both of our backgrounds. We are making
her aware, and she is becoming more knowledgeable and in tune, with
her heritage. My daughter is still too young to understand; now everyone
is just blown away by her cleverness and cuteness. As she gets older
she will be confronted with the color issue, and hopefully we will
have prepared her.
_________________________________________
One of my missions is to educate the masses that there are
"multi" families out there that are fully functional.
_________________________________________
One thing caught me off guard. During the interview, my husband asked
my daughter: What color am I? - Black. - What
color is your Momma? - White - And what color
are you? - Brown! She said this laughing, and I
know she really knows that we are all different colors and our friends
families are not. At that moment it sounded like a drill to me.
Afterwards, I pondered on this moment. I am wondering if we parents
of multi-racial children try too hard to "prepare" them.
Are we so afraid of what they will be confronted with because of their
color that we drill comebacks into them? With the comebacks, are we
pressing our own fears, implications and opinions into their head,
not leaving any space for them to form their own?
This discussion is one you hear often in multi-family rounds. Do we
teach, teach, and teach? So that if one day a black child says she
is NOT black, she knows she is half? Or when she is claimed black
because she has a drop of black blood (must be a leftover
phrase from slavery days) that she knows to respond that no, she is
also white. Does she have to recite that one of her great-grandmas
was part of the bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama, and that the other
carried her family through the war alone, proving that she knows and
is proud of her rich heritage? Are we drilling too much?
_________________________________________
Are we so afraid of what they will be confronted with because
of their color that we drill comebacks into them?
_________________________________________
I watch my daughter on the playground, where kids of all ages, colors
and sizes play together. Perfect strangers one moment, playmates the
next. They dont care about race, religion, rich, poor, etc;
all they care about is playing together. How often do I gaze at them
wondering, If they would only stay so innocent and tolerant!
Maybe it is time we packed our own fears away and let the children
develop their own experiences. Who knows, all of these playmates may
become our next generation of unbiased adults!
Heike Boehnke-Sharp is the mother of two, and lives with her family
in California. She is the owner of www.goddessinthegroove.com,
a website for and by women, where many of her articles are featured.
She is currently working on a novel.
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