Racial passing was a painful way to improve lifePosted in Articles, History, Media Archive, Passing, United States on 2014-10-09 00:23Z by Steven |
Racial passing was a painful way to improve life
Asbury Park Press
Neptune, New Jersey
2014-09-19
Kelly-Jane Cotter, Staff Writer
Racial passing helped African-Americans create new lives in a time of danger. But a Morristown author’s new book also examines the complex legacy of passing, and the pain of leaving families behind.
Allyson Hobbs has a gap in her history that will be familiar to many African-Americans.
“My aunt told me a story of a relative who passed as white in the ’30s and ’40s,” Hobbs said. “Her mother believed it was the best thing to improve her life circumstances, but my relative did not want to do it. She didn’t want to go. She didn’t want to leave the South side of Chicago and everyone she knew.”
Nevertheless, the light-skinned young woman left her darker family members and started anew. She married a white man and had white children. She “passed.”
“One day, she gets a very inconvenient call from her mother,” Hobbs said. “Her father had died, and her mother wanted her to come home for the funeral. But she couldn’t. How could she go? How would she have explained this to her husband and children, that suddenly there was this black family in Chicago? She didn’t go, and she never went back.”…
Read the entire article here.