Love in the face of racism: Being an interracial familyPosted in Articles, Census/Demographics, Family/Parenting, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2015-12-03 02:29Z by Steven |
Love in the face of racism: Being an interracial family
Cable News Network (CNN)
2015-11-25
Jareen Imam, Social Discovery Producer
CNN)—When Karen Garsee picked her 5-year-old daughter up from kindergarten in September, she wasn’t prepared for what Kaylee had to say.
The kids at school wouldn’t play with me today.
Why?
Because I’m brown.
Those words struck Garsee right in the heart. Being white, she didn’t know what she could say to make her daughter feel better. At that moment, they simply embraced.
“I didn’t think kids at that age really thought about other kids being different,” Garsee says.
That wouldn’t be the last time the schoolchildren didn’t want to play with Kaylee.
“We live in the South and racism is loud and it’s still out there,” Garsee says.
A CNN/Kaiser Family Foundation Poll on race found that about half (49%) of Americans say racism is a big problem in our society. Compare that to 2011 when 28% said racism was a big problem. And in 1995, shortly after the O.J. Simpson trial and a couple of years after the race riots in Los Angeles, 41% of people said racism was a big societal problem…
Read the entire article here.