Race & Ethnicity
In reply to the discussion: My great-grandmother hid her race. Two decades later I understand why. [View all]Hekate
(94,430 posts)My family moved to the Territory of Hawaii in 1957, thanks to my dads job with Lockheed Aircraft. Outsiders often described it as a racial paradise, and since that was a kind of flattery, locals went with that. It always was more complicated than that, and has grown more so, but thats a story for another day.
Just as children on the Mainland at that time could recount an abbreviated genealogy based on Western Europe, my classmates could tell the tale of Asia and Polynesia and Europe all within their own family tree. I grew up not being aware that I actually had an ethnic group myself sure I looked like my immediate family, but doesnt everybody? I was in my mid-30s back living in SoCal, when I visited Boston and saw family members on every street corner. Who knew Irish was ethnic and not generic?
I grew up knowing that race is fluid, though in the context of the turbulent era on the Mainland, it was all framed in Black and White outside the Islands. It took me many years to sort it out more expansively, based on my own lived experience of observing social fluidity one drop of Hawaiian ancestry as a positive claim and sign of belonging, are you local, can you speak da kine, and so much else. Do you belong.
I will never forget how Barack Obamas first run for President was received here at DU. Our old archives tell the tale of confusion and anger. He couldnt be easily slotted into a known category. Was he too black? Was he black enough? Did his mother raise him to be white? What about those grandparents?
But once I read Dreams from My Father, I knew the racial and social fluidity of his upbringing. I knew how his birth in Hawaii had shaped him, and how easily he could have decided to remain, marry there; his children and grandchildren would be local kids. It was his White mother who encouraged him to see farther beginning in their years in Indonesia, including playing him recordings of African American music and MLKs speeches.
When he left Hawaii for college as a young man, it was a journey of self-discovery as an African American, and he married Michelle and we kind of know the rest. But I think his lived experiences of race as social construct and how fluid it could be meant he could not be easily slotted into categories Americans are used to he didnt even have to say it, though as a politician he ultimately told a story in terms of a kind of American mythology (Kansas/Kenya). Michelle gets it though.