Taye Diggs, Embrace Blackness In Mixed Families: They’re Not Mutually ExclusivePosted in Articles, Family/Parenting, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2015-11-20 21:17Z by Steven |
Taye Diggs, Embrace Blackness In Mixed Families: They’re Not Mutually Exclusive
Global Grind
2015-10-18
Jada Gomez, Managing Editor
Taye Diggs is set to release a second children’s book, Mixed Me, to teach young biracial children how to embrace their multicultural, multi-hued identities. But before it hits shelves, it needs a few edits… from a multiracial person.
In an interview with The Grio, the actor shared that he wants his son, Walker Nathaniel Diggs, to be identified as mixed and not Black. The most troubling part of the admission is that he “fears” people will see his son as Black. With the best of intentions I’m sure, his remarks were more fixated on Walker’s outer shell, and what other people will think about his son, than instilling a sense of identity at Walker’s core.
As a millennial of mixed heritage, I learned quite early that my skin color and “otherness” would raise questions about who I am, and what I should “identify” with, throughout my life. The first major hit came in preschool, when my Latino father showed up to parent-teacher night with my African-American mother. Usually, my mom would handle picking me up from school, so my classmates – and most importantly, their parents – had never met Juan Gomez before. The night was as normal as any four-year-old’s night, as we watched Sesame Street while our parents met with teachers. All in all, pretty harmless…
Read the entire article here.