Between a rock and a hard place
Afro-Latinos grapple with labels in U.S.
By JANITA POE
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Jacqueline Rosier is a Latina who loves her culture and speaks Spanish as fluently as English.
But Rosier -- a native of Panama who is of African descent -- has struggled to identify herself as part of the Latin American community since coming to the United States 28 years ago.
"I always shock people and get a lot of questions when I say I'm a Latina," said Rosier, 38, a marketing and public relations manager in Duluth. "I've found a lot of white people don't accept me or respect me, on a certain level, because of my color. And I've found a lot of African-Americans want to put me in their box."
For dark-skinned Latinos in the United States, the American dream is often punctuated with dismaying experiences of trying to fit into a classification-oriented society. Black Latinos share a culture and language with white Latinos, but some say the race consciousness of America forces them to adopt an identity -- as black Americans -- that is not really their own. If they eschew the label, Afro-Latinos say they still are treated as African-Americans by most people and resented by some blacks who think they are ashamed of their African heritage.
Also from the same page:
AFRO-DESCENDANTS IN LATIN AMERICA
Here's an abbreviated list of Latin American countries, their total population and their proportion of people of African origin.
Dominican Republic | 9 million | 84% |
Cuba | 11 million | 62% |
Brazil | 170 million | 45% |
Colombia | 40 million | 26% |
Panama | 3 million | 14% |
Venezuela | 23 million | 10% |
Ecuador | 12 million | 10% |
Nicaragua | 5 million | 9% |
Peru | 27 million | 5% |
posted by Prometheus 6 at 8/12/2003 11:26:15 AM |