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- <text id=93TT1731>
- <title>
- May 17, 1993: Growing Up In Black And White
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 48
- Growing Up In Black And White
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>For African-American children, learning to love themselves is
- a tough challenge
- </p>
- <p>By JACK E. WHITE
- </p>
- <p> "Mommy, I want to be white."
- </p>
- <p> Imagine my wife's anguish and alarm when our beautiful
- brown-skinned three-year-old daughter made that declaration. We
- thought we were doing everything right to develop her
- self-esteem and positive racial identity. We overloaded her toy
- box with black dolls. We carefully monitored the racial content
- of TV shows and videos, ruling out Song of the South and Dumbo,
- two classic Disney movies marred by demeaning black stereotypes.
- But we saw no harm in Pinocchio, which seemed as racially benign
- as Sesame Street or Barney, and a good deal more engaging. Yet
- now our daughter was saying she wanted to be white, to be like
- the puppet who becomes a real boy in the movie. How had she got
- that potentially soul-destroying idea and, even more important,
- what should we do about it?
- </p>
- <p> That episode was an unsettling reminder of the unique
- burden that haunts black parents in America: helping their
- children come to terms with being black in a country where the
- message too often seems to be that being white is better.
- Developing a healthy self-image would be difficult enough for
- black children with all the real-life reminders that blacks and
- whites are still treated differently. But it is made even harder
- by the seductive racial bias in TV, movies and children's books,
- which seem to link everything beautiful and alluring with
- whiteness while often treating blacks as afterthoughts. Growing
- up in this all pervading world of whiteness can be
- psychologically exhausting for black children just as they begin
- to figure out who they are. As a four-year-old boy told his
- father after spending another day in the overwhelmingly white
- environment of his Connecticut day-care facility, "Dad, I'm
- tired of being black."
- </p>
- <p> In theory it should now be easier for children to develop
- a healthy sense of black pride than it was during segregation.
- In 1947 psychologists Kenneth and Mamie Clark conducted a
- famous experiment that demonstrated just how much black children
- had internalized the hatred that society directed at their
- race. They asked 253 black children to choose between four
- dolls, two black and two white. The result: two-thirds of the
- children preferred white dolls.
- </p>
- <p> The conventional wisdom had been that black self-hatred
- was a by-product of discrimination that would wither away as
- society became more tolerant. Despite the civil rights movement
- of the 1960s, the black-is-beautiful movement of the '70s, the
- proliferation of black characters on television shows during the
- '80s and the renascent black nationalist movement of the '90s,
- the prowhite message has not lost its power. In 1985
- psychologist Darlene Powell-Hopson updated the Clarks'
- experiment using black and white Cabbage Patch dolls and got a
- virtually identical result: 65% of the black children preferred
- white dolls. "Black is dirty," one youngster explained.
- Powell-Hopson thinks the result would be the same if the test
- were repeated today.
- </p>
- <p> Black mental-health workers say the trouble is that
- virtually all the prog ress the U.S. has made toward racial
- fairness has been in one direction. To be accepted by whites,
- blacks have to become more like them, while many whites have not
- changed their attitudes at all. Study after study has shown that
- the majority of whites, for all the commitment to equality they
- espouse, still consider blacks to be inferior, undesirable and
- dangerous. "Even though race relations have changed for the
- better, people maintain those old stereotypes," says
- Powell-Hopson. "The same racial dynamics occur in an integrated
- environment as occurred in segregation; it's just more covert."
- </p>
- <p> Psychiatrists say children as young as two can pick up
- these damaging messages, often from subtle signals of black
- inferiority unwittingly embedded in children's books, toys and
- TV programs designed for the white mainstream. "There are many
- more positive images about black people in the media than there
- used to be, but there's still a lot that says that white is more
- beautiful and powerful than black, that white is good and black
- is bad," says James P. Comer, a Yale University psychiatrist who
- collaborated with fellow black psychiatrist Alvin F. Poussaint
- on Raising Black Children (Plume).
- </p>
- <p> The bigotry is not usually as blatant as it was in Roald
- Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. When the book was
- published in 1964, the New York Times called it "a richly
- inventive and humorous tale." Blacks didn't see anything funny
- about having the factory staffed by "Oompa-Loompas," pygmy
- workers imported in shipping cartons from the jungle where they
- had been living in the trees.
- </p>
- <p> Today white-controlled companies are doing a better job of
- erasing racially loaded subtexts from children's books and
- movies. Yet those messages still get through, in part because
- they are at times so subtle even a specialist like Powell-Hopson
- misses them. She recently bought a book about a cat for her
- six-year-old daughter, who has a love of felines. Only when
- Powell-Hopson got home did she discover that the beautiful white
- cat in the story turns black when it starts behaving badly.
- Moreover, when the products are not objectionable, they are
- sometimes promoted in ways that unintentionally drive home the
- theme of black inferiority. Powell-Hopson cites a TV ad for
- dolls that displayed a black version in the background behind
- the white model "as though it were a second-class citizen."
- </p>
- <p> Sadly, black self-hatred can also begin at home. Even
- today, says Powell-Hopson, "many of us perpetuate negative
- messages, showing preference for lighter complexions, saying
- nappy hair is bad and straight hair is good, calling other black
- people `niggers,' that sort of thing." This danger can be
- greater than the one posed by TV and the other media because
- children learn so much by simple imitation of the adults they
- are closest to. Once implanted in a toddler's mind, teachers and
- psychologists say, such misconceptions can blossom into a
- full-blown racial identity crisis during adolescence, affecting
- everything from performance in the classroom to a youngster's
- susceptibility to crime and drug abuse. But they can be
- neutralized if parents react properly.
- </p>
- <p> In their book, Comer and Poussaint emphasize a calm and
- straightforward approach. They point out that even black
- children from affluent homes in integrated neighborhoods need
- reassurance about racial issues because from their earliest days
- they sense that their lives are "viewed cheaply by white
- society." If, for example, a black little girl says she wishes
- she had straight blond hair, they advise parents to point out
- "in a relaxed and unemotional manner...that she is black and
- that most black people have nice curly black hair, and that most
- white people have straight hair, brown, blond, black. At this
- age what you convey in your voice and manner will either make
- it O.K. or make it a problem."
- </p>
- <p> Powell-Hopson, who along with her psychologist husband
- Derek has written Different and Wonderful: Raising Black
- Children in a Race-Conscious Society (Fireside), takes a more
- aggressive approach, urging black parents in effect to inoculate
- their children against negative messages at an early age. For
- example, the authors suggest that African-American parents whose
- children display a preference for white dolls or action figures
- should encourage them to play with a black one by "dressing it
- in the best clothes, or having it sit next to you, or doing
- anything you can think of to make your child sense that you
- prefer that doll." After that, the Hopsons say, the child can
- be offered a chance to play with the toy, on the condition that
- "you promise to take the very best care of it. You know it is
- my favorite." By doing so, the Hopsons claim, "most children
- will jump at a chance to hold the toy even for a second."
- </p>
- <p> White children are no less vulnerable to racial messages.
- Their reactions can range from a false sense of superiority over
- blacks to an identification with sports superstars like Michael
- Jordan so complete that they want to become black. But if white
- parents look for guidance from popular child-care manuals, they
- won't find any. "I haven't included it because I don't feel like
- an expert in that area," says T. Berry Brazelton, author of
- Infants and Mothers and other child-care books. "I think it's
- a very, very serious issue that this country hasn't faced up
- to." Unless it does, the U.S. runs the risk of rearing another
- generation of white children crippled by the belief that they
- are better than blacks and black children who agree.
- </p>
- <p> As for my daughter, we're concerned but confident. As
- Comer says, "In the long run what children learn from their
- parents is more powerful than anything they get from any other
- source." When my little girl expressed the wish to be white, my
- wife put aside her anguish and smilingly replied that she is
- bright and black and beautiful, a very special child. We'll keep
- telling her that until we're sure she loves herself as much as
- we love her.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-