WHY AM I BLACK?
A colleague of mine the other day
asked me why I insist on boxing myself and calling myself ‘black’.
‘You’re brown, you’re not even
black,’ she revealed to me. She’s one of those people who insist she doesn’t
see race, blah blah rainbow nation.
But she’s also one of those people
who see black as just a skin colour, it appears to me, and black is so many
things to so many people. I don’t see absolutely anything wrong with defining
myself as black; it’s like being a woman or being a Christian.
I love being a woman, not just
because it’s a gender I happened to be assigned at birth, but I embrace
everything about being a woman.
I love the fact that I have a
nurturing nature, that I am strong, that one day I can have short hair and the
next day it can reach my bum and I love that my body is strong enough to carry
a baby. I love feeling beautiful, sexy, and emotional.
Of course there are negatives to
being a woman, a black woman, especially in this country. You’re vulnerable to
criminals; you are not always given the respect you deserve and for five days
every month you are your body’s mercy.
But would I change being a woman
for anything? No. I love being a woman.
I also love being a Christian. I
love believing in a higher being than myself, I love going to church, praise
and worship and I enjoy all the blessings God has bestowed on me.
Of course there are challenging
moments where I feel despondent, but does this mean I want to stop being a
Christian? No, of course not.
Which brings me to being black. Black
for me is not just a skin colour, which was one of the degrading and
humiliating consequences of a system like apartheid in our country. People just
look at your skin colour and decide you’re not good enough based on that. There
is a whole culture I love to being black. Of course, it’s different for every
person.
My blackness is inextricably linked
to my upbringing. I grew up in a township on the East Rand called
Katlehong and that’s where my blackness was cultivated.
I learnt being black is about
community, about sharing and about looking after each other. I learnt even in
the thick of trouble in your life, to smile and to always keep your head up. I
learnt never to look down on people, because one day it could be you.
As a black person, I learnt that
each life is important and valued enough to have a dignified funeral that is
planned for. I learnt that every older person in my street was a mother or
father figure and that they had a duty to look after me and chastise if need be.
I learnt dances I could never have
learnt living in the suburbs and ate delicious food that only a black hand
could conjure.
But are there annoying things about
black people as well? Yes, of course.
I still get annoyed with black
people who want to have huge funerals when we are limping through tough
economic times, and yes I get annoyed when Exclusive Books in Soweto closes
down because black people aren’t buying books and reading when they can afford
it and yes I get very annoyed when you go to a restaurant and the black
waitress treats the white patron better than you.
But does that mean I’m going to
stop being black? Of course not. Because black is more than just a skin colour
to me, it’s who I am. As long as I am not using my blackness to victimise other
people, I don’t see anything wrong with this.
So, yes, I am a proponent of the
rainbow nation but as long as I can still have the choice to define myself how
I want.
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