Showing posts with label African-American issues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African-American issues. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2011

What's In A Name?


TransGriot Note:  A post from the wise sista who is the editrix or Womanist Musings

I don't read Essence very often and so I am a little late to the following story, but it still needs to be discussed.  In March, Essence published a satirical piece by Siebra Muhammad in March that declared that a judge had decided to make it illegal for Black women to name their children because of the propensity of supposedly ridiculous names. The following is a small snippet of the piece in question.

In a decision that’s expected to send shockwaves through the African-American community—and yet, give much relief to teachers everywhere—a federal judge ruled today that black women no longer have independent naming rights for their children. Too many black children—and many adults—bear names that border on not even being words, he said.

“I am simply tired of these ridiculous names black women are giving their children,” said U.S. Federal Judge Ryan Cabrera before rendering his decision. “Someone had to put a stop to it.”

The rule applies to all black women, but Cabrera singled out impoverished mothers.

“They are the worst perpetrators,” he said. “They put in apostrophes where none are needed. They think a ‘Q’ is a must. There was a time when Shaniqua and Tawanda were names you dreaded. Now, if you’re a black girl, you hope you get a name as sensible as one of those.”

Few stepped forward to defend black women—and black women themselves seemed relieved.

“It’s so hard to keep coming up with something unique,” said Uneeqqi Jenkins, 22, an African-American mother of seven who survives on public assistance. Her children are named Daryl, Q’Antity, Uhlleejsha, Cray-Ig, Fellisittee, Tay’Sh’awn and Day’Shawndra.

Beginning in one week, at least three white people must agree with the name before a black mother can name her child.

“Hopefully we can see a lot more black children with sensible names like Jake and Connor,” Cabrera said.  (continue reading)
What constitutes a sensible name?  Though this article is satire and no legal judgement has been declared, Black names have come under criticism in the mainstream. Black names are an attempt to reclaim what has been lost.  The children of the diaspora have the names of our slave owners and anglicized first names, and this is a direct result of a complete and utter loss of our culture.  To then turn around and demonize attempts to create names that reflect this loss is racist, and in the case of ridicule by other Blacks represents internalized racism.

To be honest, I have not always felt that way about these names. I thought about them as ghetto names that were far beneath me.  I even used to call Black women whom I deemed to be of low class Shenequas, that is until one day I said this and the White people around me nodded their head in approval.  I wanted a separation between this Black woman and myself because I looked upon her as making it harder for me to make it through my day, rather than targeting the real problem - Whiteness.  These names are an attempt to reclaim what was taken from us and it is specifically because they spring from Blacks that they are ridiculed.

Each name has a cultural background and yet we do not have a problem with names like Connor, Dimitri, Alannah, Antonio, Robert, though they mark culture just as surely as Kwame and LaShawn. By encouraging us to hate and ridicule these names, Whiteness is attempting to discipline and shame Blacks, though this is not a phenomenon unique to us.  During the heyday of Ellis Island, people would often emerge to find their names changed by agents who were not patient with immigrants.  They were poor, and in many cases certainly not understood to be White, though they would be deemed so today.  If we look at the history of many people in the public eye the one trend that we can easily see is that if their names are deemed to ethnic they are changed.  Just as Frederic Austerlitz Jr. was deemed better than Fred Astaire, even a name is bland as George Michael, is understood to be better than Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou.  Whiteness today is still conditional upon no obvious displays of culture, though some cultures are understood be better than others. 

There is a cost beyond ridicule to having a Black name.  It has been proven repeatedly that given the choice between an anglicized name on a resume and an ethnic name, that employers will choose to interview the person with the anglicized name, even in cases where the resumes have similar education and employment history. There is also a stigma of poverty attached to the name.  The more that a person of colour is able to conform to Whiteness, the greater chance they have of financial success.  A Black name is considered by many to be an albatross. Instead on focusing on these names, we should be turning our attention to why these names bring about such ire.  The urge discipline and shame someone into conforming never comes from a place of helpfulness, rather it arises from a desire to ensure that there is someone lower on the pyramid of hierarchy than you.


Sunday, January 23, 2011

You White Pro Birthers Never Cared About Black Lives Before And Still Don't

Like other people in the blogosphere, I have not been happy lately about the recent campaign of the pro birth movement trying to inject race in the abortion debate.and faux concern for African American lives.

First it was those jacked up 'endangered species' billboards.   Now comes Rick Santorum,  who as the former US senator for Pennsylvania earned F's on the NAACP Congressional Civil Rights report card delivering a twisted history comment aimed at President Obama's pro choice stance that only served to put the right wing hypocrisy about African American lives in full view

Since you're so concerned about us, I have to ask the following questions of you vanilla pro-birthers.

If you are so concerned with African-American babies, why aren't you supporting universal health care so those babies and their parents can grow up healthy?

Why are you pro-birthers opposing federally or state funded day care so that their mothers can work and earn decent paychecks to support these kids that you profess to love so much?  


Why aren't you supporting full funding for public schools and a 21st century curriculum that focuses on teaching math, facts based science and critical thinking skills in order for those babies to get into college?

Why are you cutting Pell grants and cutting funding for colleges and universities?   Some of those African-American babies will need to have those programs around so that they can get a good education and join the workforce with good jobs at good wages. 




It also goes without saying that people have to have jobs in order to earn the income to take care of a child after it comes out of the birth canal. 

And segueing back to public schools for a moment, the best way to cut down the rate of abortions is to have comprehensive reality based sex education.  The abstinence only model that you endorsed doesn't work and sets up a fantasy world that even teen mother and spokesmodel for abstinence Bristol Palin couldn't live up to.




You conservative pro-birthers haven't cared about Black lives for 400 years and still don't, so how dare you part your lips to even try to claim that you do when your social policy stances factor into some of the reasons why Black women terminate their pregnancies in the first place?

Monday, January 17, 2011

Loving Black People Includes Black Transpeople As Well

I said this before more than a few times in various ways on this blog, but it bears repeating especially on King Day.

Last night I had a long thought provoking conversation with a friend who is the mother of a beautiful African American transwoman.

In the course of our nearly two hour conversation she shared with me she is not happy with the current state of African American transpeople and decried not only the lack of positive media exposure for African American transpeople, but the lack of exposure for positive African American trans role models and our invisibility in the larger trans and GL movement.

See, and y'all thought nobody besides Moni was paying attention and complaining about it.  You better recognize.

But back to the post since this one is primarily aimed at my African-American brothers and sisters.

I, your African descended trans brothers and trans sisters, and the people who love and care about us are sick and tired of being sick and tired of the animus, the extreme violence, disrespect, ignorance and disdain aimed at us.

It needs to end in our community ASAP.

I'm disgusted with the ignorant, buffoonish and scientifically illiterate comments on Blackosphere gossip wastelands such as Bossip, Media Take Out, Sandra Rose and elsewhere in mainstream media outlets as well every time the subject of African American transpeople comes up.

I'm tired of megachurch ministers pimping hate and disinformation of us to keep clocking those faith based bucks or politicians doing so to amass 'more conservafool than thou' street credibility as they suck up to right wingers and build their personal political power to our detriment.  . 

I'm also tired of those same Black ministers and politicians who are acting as drum majors for injustice as they have a hand in delaying or impeding trans people from getting civil rights coverage we desperately need or lead the charge against us simply getting decent treatment as human beings.

I'm tired of media peeps such as Oprah who can put every color of transperson on their shows when it involves painting transpeople in a positive light except an African American one.

I'm tired of popular culture that paints us with the same 'unwoman' brush as it does our African American cis sisters and our community being silent about it.

I'm also tired of our community aiming 'that's a man' shade at African-American women who don't fit their notions of what a woman is supposed to be, look or act like out of spiteful hatred of her or other specious reasons.  

I'm fed up with the po-po's disrespecting us and violating our civil rights, and sometimes the worst offenders being African American cops.


I'm going to keep repeating it until y'all get sick of me saying it, and then you'll still be hearing me say it in your sleep.

African American transpeople are part of the diverse mosaic of human life.    We share the same blood ties to the African continent and our history that you cis African-Americans do.

We are proud of our heritage, are spiritual people and want to contribute our talents to building our community.

It is past time that every Black American  and every African descended person across the Diaspora realizes that.


This is a message that needs to sink in today and beyond King Day.  If you claim to love all Black people, then by extension that means Black transpeople are included in that definition as well.

TransGriot Note: photo is the late Stacy Blahnik Lee