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Stolen Identity

Denise Gunn · Monday, February 8th 2016 at 9:30PM · 653 views
I recently found out from watching a discussion filmed on the Phil Donahue show that the term anti-Semitic in its true and historical context refers to people who live in Northeast Africa who speak an African and an Asian language. I'm not from Northeast Africa, but I am African and Asian in my ethnic makeup. I know what it is to be half of a race, semi means half.

I've felt the scalding burn of hatred that comes in the rejection of me as one of their own. The Asian restaurant owner who unapologetically informed me that she was out of rice and indignantly stared at me as I walked uncomfortably out of her little storefront. I saw her eyes still on me from across the street as I briefly turned in her direction to get in my car and shut my door.

In high school, the friend of a friend - who's advances I had turned down because he already had a girlfriend - who told me that I wasn't allowed to say "n*$$@" and got all hyped about punching me in my face if I said it. The subtler form of rejection from a nasty co-worker who told me I was white because my hair wasn't kinky. I straightened my hair. Hid my kinks just like she did. My hair was not as kinky as hers, but humidity and lack of an iron would expose me just the same. One day it did. I still remember the amazed look of a coworker who saw my unsmoothed hair because my friend had delayed in returning me my curling iron. Although by nature possessing a very congenial personality, she warmed up to me even more and seemed delighted to see the true nature of my hair that I had masterly hidden.

Underlying my struggles with peer-acceptance was my struggle for self-acceptance. Into adulthood the struggle was still my companion. I prayed and asked God one time why I couldn't just be one race, asian or black; I never wanted to be white. Why the curse of being both? The days of my childhood were bundled with confusion that comes with being aware that I stand out for reasons I couldn't understand. I was just being myself like everyone else...or not like anyone else?

Constantly my asian grandmother was telling me I'm just like a stubborn Asian daughter; that's wasn't a compliment, sons and obedience are favored. Contrastingly, I was the black entertainment for my older siblings, they would laugh wildly at me, how move my neck and put my hand on my hip when I'm talking back to them. This hostile intrusion into my ethnic identity permeated my social environment. One occasion of many, I was reminded of my unwanted blackness when the most unliked boy in school yells "black girl" at me after I out ran him, and everyone else, in gym class.

Books about being half might have helped me. Real pictures of people in Northeast Africa called semites might have lessened my bewilderment for other people's interpretation of me. I wouldn't have felt like I was the only one. But semite is a political term used in media and badly written U.S. History curriculum. I can't use my semite identity to feel whole around people because a white religious group has trademarked it. How they are accepted as semites is absolutely beyond any reasoning to me. Maybe I should to travel to Northeast Africa. I would be the only semite not offended by anti-Semitic encounters, it would be like a brush with the truth for me. My identity returned to me and one less obstacle to be whole.

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Denise Gunn San Diego, CA

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Comments (5)

Harry Watley Tuesday, February 9th 2016 at 12:44AM

Yes! you are a Black American and we are going to become a nation in a country of our own! We are coming into the territory from the northern borders of N.C. into the Gulf of Mexico and from the middle of the Mississippi River into the Atlantic Ocean to become our own!

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. Tuesday, February 9th 2016 at 8:09AM

Great post Sister Gunn and testimony of a Black and Asian woman. Welcome to Black In America, I'm looking forward to seeing more from you, Thank You.



Gregory V. Boulware, Esq. Tuesday, February 9th 2016 at 11:22AM

/*
Hello Sister Denise! Happy to know YOU!

My children are Black and White. You should bare no shame or indignation because of who and what you are Shemetic/Hametic - an Asian Hebrew. Your situation is not unique or unheard of...there are many people who are just like you - many folks are aware of that fact as well.

"Many people who are ‘Bi-Racial’ have been perceived as ‘Black’ unless it benefits or pleases the eye of the beholder. Not to mention those who have been described as passing – (for white). Many children who are Bi-Racial have been raised in the Black community. However, that particular count is misleading. The billions of Bi-Racial Children all over the world have not been included with the groups of Bi-Racial Children in the states. When you consider Germany, Italy, France, Russia, Ireland, England, Spain, China, Japan, Turkey, Israel, and all of the other countries, nations, and states throughout the world that Black People have at one time or another, set foot by visitation and/or planted roots; babies were born and bred without a thought, to the contrary or otherwise – it was a normal thing to do."
http://blackhistory.com/content/269584/we-...

I would invite you, Dear Sister, to peruse the postings on my timeline(s) and discover for yourself the beauty and the gift(s) that you have been blessed with. Come on in out of the storm, my dear, you'll be glad you did.

I'll be here for YOU... :-)

In Peace and Love,

'G'
*/

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. Tuesday, February 9th 2016 at 12:35PM

Brother Doctor Gregory Boulware, that was great encouragement, even I felt them heartfelt words. WOW!

Jeni Fa Friday, February 12th 2016 at 11:11AM

@ Denise,

..."Maybe I should to travel to Northeast Africa. I would be the only semite not offended by anti-Semitic encounters, it would be like a brush with the truth for me. My identity returned to me and one less obstacle to be whole."...

I'm sorry to hear about your pain. My sincerest apologies to you. Growing up and going through the various stages of adolescence to teen years brings a lot of confusion but the term(s) Multicultural and ethnic has replaced the term "mixed race". Rest assured that multicultural people are everywhere paving their own identities.


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