‘Soy Yo!’: Play explores being multi-racial in a world where race mattersPosted in Articles, Arts, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2013-06-29 18:55Z by Steven |
‘Soy Yo!’: Play explores being multi-racial in a world where race matters
St. Louis Beacon
2013-06-26
Parents, can you even imagine being accused of kidnapping your own children? It happened to Shari LeKane-Yentumi of University City.
The reason was race. She’s white, her husband’s black. Their three children are both; and in our society, “both” often reads: black.
It was the mid-1990s. LeKane-Yentumi opened her door to the accusing faces of state officials. Someone had seen a white woman shepherding a black toddler and baby across a grocery-store parking lot on Lindell in St. Louis City, and called the authorities.
“It was reported that I had children who were not mine,” LeKane-Yentumi said. “And I was investigated.”
A review of birth certificates and other documentation settled that situation. But the demoralizing incident put LeKane-Yentumi on alert whenever she left the inclusiveness of her own community.
Being multi-racial—with African, Caribbean, European and Native American heritage—also forces the Yentumi children, now young adults, to deny much of their identity when they have to check a single box.
LIke the loose translation of “Soy Yo!,” an upcoming local play about being multi-racial, the Yentumi children believe, “I Am Me.” They and their friends, who are mostly multi-racial, reject narrow definitions of “black,” “white” and other such categories.
“They aren’t as strict about how they want to define race,” LeKane-Yentumi said. “And they don’t want to be defined by it.”…
Read the entire article here.