preview

A Second Generation Immigrant Whose Parents Emigrated From Ethiopia

Good Essays

S is a male Johns Hopkins University student, who is a second generation immigrant whose parents emigrated from Ethiopia. During Ethiopia was in transition between a dictatorship and more representative government, S’s parents came to the US and settled in a large town in the south-side Seattle. Regarding his race and ethnicity, he identifies himself as Black Ethiopian, although other people commonly perceive him as Brazilian or Egyptian. He believes that it is because of his looks that “may not be stereotypically black.” Interestingly, my first impression of S was also very similar. In the beginning of the semester, S walked into 5th-year Chinese class with colorful do-rag covering his long hair. From his slightly lighter skin tone, a …show more content…

In fact, S said many Ethiopian immigrants reject the label “black,” and talk differently about themselves from other US born black people. Then S provided an anecdote of him recognizing his own race in the US society for the first time. When he was young, his mom always locked the door whenever they drove down the neighborhood of which residents were predominantly black. S’s parents labeled the US born blacks in Arabic word that technically meant “slave,” a derogatory term for African Americans. But in general, S said his parents avoided answering to many of the questions pertaining to racial issues in American society, and were even afraid that S might actively express his thoughts about such matter in public. Although his parents’ racial attitudes remained relatively reticent, S “clearly remember[ed] that there was very distinguishable ‘us’ from the ‘other’ black people, who may be dressing or speaking differently.” The social identity theory suggests that it is a natural tendency to categorize people into us vs. them, assigning superior traits to in-group and negative traits to out-group. However, it was surprising to learn that people would not want to identify with the race that most people would categorize them in. This phenomenon of dissociating themselves from other African Americans resonates with Tatum’s internalized oppression, which explains when the member of a

Get Access