Unmasking the Secret Life Behind White Passing

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ก.ย. 2024
  • The concept of racial passing is where individuals from one racial group are perceived or pass as members of another racial group. Historically prevalent in the United States, racial passing often involved Black or multiracial individuals assimilating into the white majority to navigate societal barriers like harsh racial segregation and discrimination.
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ความคิดเห็น • 813

  • @teshara
    @teshara 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +102

    The adoption agency told my parents I'd be able to pass and gave me to a white family. My mom painstakingly straightened my hair every day. No one told me I was biracial until I was in my teens and then it was to be kept a secret.
    I told EVERYONE.
    I'm also not that old. I was born in the 70's. This crap is still going on.

    • @ScrubsToScreensWithFibro
      @ScrubsToScreensWithFibro 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      😮

    • @TaurusMoon-hu3pd
      @TaurusMoon-hu3pd 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Did you read Georgina Lawton's book Raceless?

    • @angellover02171
      @angellover02171 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Did you think you were Black?

    • @teshara
      @teshara 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@angellover02171 I knew I was something other than white because I got so dark in the summers. My friends thought I was half black. I'm actually half afro-Caribbean.

    • @norama3998
      @norama3998 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      كيف لإنسان لا يعرف حقيقة أصله ؟ هذا كذب و ظلم و اعتداء على حقّ الغير

  • @tlyoung1420
    @tlyoung1420 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +114

    A lot of "White" people are not as white as they think they are. America is mixed and we should embrace it. ❤

    • @susanlett9632
      @susanlett9632 4 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I already knew I was multi-racial as my brothers are very dark so my parents are not much darker than me their birth certificate says colored on it and mine says negro. I am a Heinz 57 I knew that as well. I took a DNA test with 23 and me about 4 years ago and I was 29.9 percent sub-Saharan African, 12 percent Asiatic which means native American, there was English Irish Norwegian, Portuguese Sephardic Jew.

    • @professionalboycottservice7872
      @professionalboycottservice7872 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      a lot of black people are not as black as they think they
      are!

    • @professionalboycottservice7872
      @professionalboycottservice7872 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I want to pass as black. Can you give me n-word pass?

  • @BrianMax
    @BrianMax 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +487

    Somebody passed as white and became my ancestor. As a child I was told that my many great great great grandmother was Cherokee. 23andMe shows I have 0 native american DNA, but 3% Congolese. It's a sad indictment of American history that people had to pass as white or another race to gain opportunities they otherwise wouldn't have.

    • @juliebryant6718
      @juliebryant6718 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +62

      I wish that someday white people would learn to love people like Jesus told them

    • @southernladybrown5092
      @southernladybrown5092 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +48

      @@juliebryant6718 DON'T hold your breath

    • @EclecticDD
      @EclecticDD 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +66

      @BrianMax Articles have been written about how a lot of White families would claim Native heritage because certain features (darker skin) would be present, but they really had some African heritage.

    • @BrianMax
      @BrianMax 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +47

      @@EclecticDD Yeah, it's pretty typical. The 'Cherokee Princess' usually turned out to be someone with African ancestry from the antebellum period. I wish we could learn their true stories.

    • @carolinezervan6301
      @carolinezervan6301 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

      The same here. I'm Senegal and gambian. Less than a percent.

  • @goyoelburro
    @goyoelburro 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +416

    As a 56 year old white man who grew up in a mostly white high school, I *really really appreciate this kind of content. It helps me learn and grow!*
    I know you mean your content to reach out to the back community, but I want to let you know that as a side effect you are also educating white folks who really need to hear this as well!

    • @Justme69316
      @Justme69316 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      💜💞💜

    • @kimjohnson8471
      @kimjohnson8471 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +38

      Now, Bro. History is history and it benefits us all. ❤

    • @southernladybrown5092
      @southernladybrown5092 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      @@goyoelburro back or BLACK Community 🤔🤔🤔🤔

    • @colettewinlock
      @colettewinlock 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +25

      True knowledge is for all. Keep learning and being curious. I’m a 69 yr old black woman

    • @audreyann1975
      @audreyann1975 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      As a side effect? Oh you're such a do-gooder.

  • @Tigerbrown44
    @Tigerbrown44 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +77

    My father was a mulatto. His mother was 12 years old when she gave birth to him. He was born in Tennessee in 1929. My father looked racially ambiguous but too dark to pass for white. He reinvented himself as an Arab. Gave himself an Arabic name and claimed to be from Iraq. My white mother thought he was Arab. Everyone i met who knew him believed him to be an Arab. I grew up believing i was mixed Arab and white. I was 52 years old when i took DNA test and discovered there was no Arab in my chart, but there was 25% west African. Mostly from Nigeria. He disowned his family and disowned his three children.. he lived the rest of his life as this character. The ancestry test linked me up to his side of the family and i met them. All black folks from Chicago. When i was younger most people thought i was a light skinned brother with green eyes and “good hair” as i got older and went bald people perceived me as white. So l have been on both sides of the color line.

    • @Wtvrflotesurgoat
      @Wtvrflotesurgoat 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Wow that’s wild. Why did he disown his children?

    • @Tigerbrown44
      @Tigerbrown44 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

      @@Wtvrflotesurgoat i believe he had severe mental issues. He abandoned his brother and sister, then his children. His need to live his assumed life was stronger than his family connection.

    • @1bebairie
      @1bebairie 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      People are beautifully created. Why do they hate themselves

    • @coilytextured9374
      @coilytextured9374 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@1bebairieback in the day it was easier to something else rather than black. Many black people did this for self preservation and to insure a good life for their children. It is very common to believe it or not. They actually made movies about it.

    • @gene1012
      @gene1012 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​9​​@@Tigerbrown44 that is sad. Why would you say he had mental problems it sounds to me he made a decision to a line himself to whiteness to make his life easier and to make the lives of his children easier. (Whether it did or not) Being black in America is not a nice thing. Back than or at present. It goes to show how whyte people or any other race of people for that matter will distance themselves from blackness. 200 years of maltreatment and forced interbreeding (I am being Conservative with using these words) will lead to many mixed race people (back than) if they can pass to pass for whyte or anything else but black. What a world we live in. Remember America had laws that disenfranchised black people. Maybe he just did not want to deal with or be treated like what black people in his time were/ still are treated 🤷

  • @Niźhonibarbercuts
    @Niźhonibarbercuts 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +143

    Interesting. On my dad’s side some people disappeared because they could pass. The family never heard from them again. Sad. A lot of them stayed, proud to identify as black despite hardships.

    • @PersianCatMeow
      @PersianCatMeow 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      They lose so much to gain so little.

    • @znayJ
      @znayJ 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

      My Great-father! chose to be a Blackman he could’ve passed as white easily!

    • @sherineclarke8292
      @sherineclarke8292 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      I read a great book, The Sweeter the Juice”, the author’s family that chose to pass for white actually were LESS successful in life compared to the ones who chose to stay Black.
      The Black family became higher educated, more affluent and actually integrated social groups that they were previously denied.
      Seems as if the “struggle” made them more resilient👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

    • @toniamcclelland-sample7278
      @toniamcclelland-sample7278 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Believe oral genealogy ❤

    • @TaurusMoon-hu3pd
      @TaurusMoon-hu3pd 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Like Sally Hemming's kids who were lighter... they just disappeared into obscurity

  • @maryannhope8276
    @maryannhope8276 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +197

    💔 I'm from a biracial family. At 70 i can't believe it is still happening and racist continues to this day 😭 Aren't we the Human Race...

    • @tamaramcrae4037
      @tamaramcrae4037 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      Not to those who think they are superior

    • @TerriKnight-x3s
      @TerriKnight-x3s 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Exactly! This should not be problematic

    • @saibliss7976
      @saibliss7976 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yes, it's the Human Race. Science shows us that there is no difference, only physical adjustments to the areas we all migrated from, which is Central Africa to various locations on the earth in search of food. If we mate with only those that look like us, we fall into the trap of being genetically too similar to the mate, hence the diseases inherent in the DNA surface. Examples are some of the monarchies of Spain and England. Even seen in some lineages of the Pharaohs of Egypt. Being mixed is a good thing.

    • @LayingInAMeadow
      @LayingInAMeadow 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      Exactly all should matter is that we are humans

    • @joannlarson6386
      @joannlarson6386 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Does it still happen today?

  • @EyeoIsis
    @EyeoIsis 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +97

    Boy did this hit home for me. My family has "passers" who wouldn't acknowledge us in the street, but would call to see how the family was doing.

    • @IDidNotAsk4ThisHandle
      @IDidNotAsk4ThisHandle 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Wow
      How is there mental stability….having to lie??

    • @luannfeld3983
      @luannfeld3983 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      That must have been heartbreaking for everyone

    • @olgaryer1001
      @olgaryer1001 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      People did what they had to do for economic opportunities. Many who did so quietly supported their darker complextion family members.

  • @deeMo81
    @deeMo81 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +63

    I’m black/creole Japanese. I believe I’m passing. Nobody believes I’m black until I show pictures or they meet my family. People assume I’m a pale Hispanic, Italian, or Filipino

    • @deeMo81
      @deeMo81 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      But I’m quick to let people know.

    • @SeenHeard
      @SeenHeard 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

      ​@@deeMo81If people are getting you screwed up for something that you have no control over, then you are not passing. Especially if you're having to prove your identity in spite of their ignorance.

    • @arigodut
      @arigodut 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

      You’re not passing. You have to deliberately deny and claim a different racial identity and actively live in that. People use “ white passing” no as purely appearance when it’s actually an action of passing as a different race.

    • @deniseberman8633
      @deniseberman8633 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      That’s why the color thing is ridiculous. We all came from the same origin.

    • @rroadmap
      @rroadmap 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

      ​@@deniseberman8633Exactly! We're all the human race!

  • @DrKb2935
    @DrKb2935 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +169

    My grandfather was mixed and could have passed for white, BUT REFUSED! HE STOOD UP AGAINST RACISIM IN KENTUCKY & MARRIED A foundational black American and had 7 sons ( one being my father). My father and mom had stories of racial hatred towards blacks but NEVER told me and my siblings "what they really experienced" until I was an adult. 😢

    • @BORN-to-Run
      @BORN-to-Run 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Your grandfather was probably HATED by the darker-skinned Black people
      and was SCARED to be who he really was!
      These are Mixed-race people who "PASS FOR BLACK," But aint!
      That's JUST AS BAD!

    • @50centricher9
      @50centricher9 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Real one

    • @quix66hiya22
      @quix66hiya22 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      My grandmother in Louisiana too! Her father was actually a White man but she married a very dark Black man.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@quix66hiya22…yes, some did do that. I have a whole side of non mixed relatives. I met some of them as an adult through DNA. I was so excited as l had only knew of this side of the family through conversations. Once l met some of them it was painfully obvious our diverse differences. I left early the next morning and broke off all contact. 😢

    • @jamellfoster6029
      @jamellfoster6029 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Your grandpa sounds like my paternal grandpa who was born in 1906. He was Mixed & looked White. He married my dark skinned grandma & had my Dad, uncles, & aunt. My Dad married my Mixed Mom. I looked Mixed even at almost 50 years old as do most of my kids.

  • @hennyvanveldhuizen5976
    @hennyvanveldhuizen5976 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +32

    I went to school with a lovely darkskinned boy who’s sister was blonde and green eyed, his other sister was even darker than he was, all the same parents, you just never know, they were all 16 % Indonesian …., he was my best friend when I was little

  • @Thatboybecookinyea
    @Thatboybecookinyea 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +64

    My great grandma passedas white. Being from New Orleans this is super common thing.

    • @BayouBarbie504
      @BayouBarbie504 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      I’m from New Orleans and can always tell a black person no matter how light/white looking they are.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@BayouBarbie504…😂😂😂😂 that’s not true. Some of you want to believe the lie that a European can be visually seen as an African. Stop gaslighting yourself.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@BayouBarbie504 ….stop with the gaslighting. I’m Cajun and Creole ⚜️ Y’all don’t know unless we tell you 😏

  • @vfry7896
    @vfry7896 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

    Creole American woman here from the south and this was refreshing and relatable. I am SO happy that you are spreading this. AS, it was TRULY a thing once upon a time. One love

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It still is 😏

  • @daniellem.gibson4658
    @daniellem.gibson4658 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +39

    My African American grandfather used to always says “just be glad you can pass.” 😢

    • @msshieka943
      @msshieka943 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      💔

    • @frederickgriffith7004
      @frederickgriffith7004 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      I always felt that the my Louisiana Creole maternal grandfather and his entire family had the best of both worlds. As well as my mother and my baby sister .They all could easily pass for White. Whether in public spaces. Or social and professional circles. In every instance White people had no clue.But they heartily embraced the greatness of Black culture passed down by the elders. And that is to have love in one's heart and to be humble and wise.The only time my maternal grandfather and my mother used their appearance was to secure better housing for their families. It even affected how they were treated by doctors and law enforcement. So if people think race and one's appearance in America does not matter in every single you do,they have no clue. Because the fact of the matter is as soon as any one of us walks out that door. Judgements are automatic. Good for some.And bad for others.One time I asked my Pop Pop(Grandfather) how did it feel being around White people who had no clue that he was a Black man. He said something really powerful. He said it wasn't always about them saying hateful things about Black people. It was about the exchange of information. The best housing. The best schools.Job openings. That who you know within the White world counts just as much as what you know. Meaning when it comes to Blacks with a lot of White people it is a don't ask don't tell type of attitude. They are not going to share the same type of information with a Black person that they would share with a White person. My late mother and even my sister at the present time have had the same experiences. So when your comments about your African American grandfather means so many things on so many levels. Because it is the brutal truth. Because when you interact with the people who have always had the institutional power it can provide the keys to the kingdom.

    • @tgsg858
      @tgsg858 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      wow 😮

    • @norama3998
      @norama3998 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ما هذا المرور الذي تتحدًثون عنه ؟ كيف لمجتمع فيه نخبة من المثقّفين أن يدع هذا العبث في المعاملات و العنصرية في العقول بين الناس .. جميع البشر من آدم عليه السّلام و آدم من تراب ! .. نقطة

    • @daniellem.gibson4658
      @daniellem.gibson4658 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@norama3998 I wish I could read this, but I can’t read Arabic. Fun fact, I am studying Arabic right now but I only know the basics. Thank you.

  • @lindarosebuchanan1650
    @lindarosebuchanan1650 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +43

    I appreciate this podcast. Many Africans Americans who were able to pass did so due to psychological abuse of constantly being verbally abused by their own families and the community. Light skinned women often met with assault and verbal insults. Often these women were targeted for sexual exploitation by both black and white men. Light skinned women had to bear the burden of being put on a pedestal due to internalized hatred of melanated skin. This also caused isolated and a sense of not belonging.

    • @The1ByTheSea
      @The1ByTheSea 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Do you think light skinned blacks had children with dark skinned blacks ;so their children would be blacker and would not endure discrimination from the black community. In the past many black discriminated light skinned blacks ;they associated light skinned blacks with whites . Also why some light skinned blacks left the community ?

    • @The1ByTheSea
      @The1ByTheSea 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      The social hierarchy went on . Even in black neighborhoods;the light skinned blacks were higher in the ladder:they were the shop owners and looked down on dark skinned blacks. I think this where dark skinned blacks ,looked at light skinned blacks as "whites " .

    • @norama3998
      @norama3998 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      لا ثقة لهن في أنفسهن لهذه الدرجة ؟
      أنا التي أزهو بجمال خَلق الله لي و صنعه البديع جل. و علا و لا أدع أحدا يكون قاضيا في حياتي أبدا ..أبدا

  • @angeljones4278
    @angeljones4278 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +94

    J.edger Hoover also passed as a White man. He kept his hair cut short because it was extremely curly. One day in the early 90th or mid 90th a black woman came on the Oprah Winfrey show claiming J.edger Hoover was her cousin and he threatened his black family if they say anything about his true identity that he would kill them his mother was pregnant with him when she married his step father Hoover she was a white woman that was carrying a black man child. Shortly after Oprah show J.edger was dug up they ran a test on his body and the black family he was passing for white

    • @LorrieMiller-qm9pz
      @LorrieMiller-qm9pz 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      Many years ago I was out and about when I was working and one afternoon an angry black woman confronted me and screamed angrily at me that I had a hell of a lot of nerve passing for white. She was very confrontational. At the time I did not know that I was anything other than predominately white and I have frequently been mistaken for Asian, and for being. of Sub Saharan African descent with mixed white European even if I did not know it at the time. I have also been asked if I am Indian by people who actually are and I find that fascinating in I am frequently told my features don't belong on a white person. I have relatives that have had mixed race marriage and are all the Human Race

    • @gearldinepoteat2482
      @gearldinepoteat2482 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Yes I remembered that.

    • @janedoe1229
      @janedoe1229 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      ​@@LorrieMiller-qm9pza simple DNA will resolve this issue for you. Why not take the test. Are you afraid of the finding

    • @peachygal4153
      @peachygal4153 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      @@LorrieMiller-qm9pz My Mother-in-law's story. She had no idea her "Cherokee" great grandfather was at least part black until my sister in-law found the 1830 census which described him as "Mulatto, free person of color." We have never been able to trace whom his parents were. The census record said he was born in Virgnia. Was he Melungeon? or the son of a white planter who gave him his freedom? We don't know but we assume he left Virgina because at that time a free person of color was not allowed to live there. Anyway, my mother-in-law was a great beauty when young. she had blond hair, gray-green eyes and tanned easily with a nice round bootie which you know white girls rarely have. if her eyes had been blue, she would have been what most women wanted to be. blond hair, blue eyes, and olive complexion. Anyway, her DNA test she took in 2016 showed 6% African total between Nigerian and Cameroon. Her blond hair she found out came from her also being 35% Scandinavian. What is really interesting to me is her ancestor's surname was Drew. Was his father's surname Andrews or possibly his father given name was Andrew? I just wonder why he took the surname Drew.

    • @dianemaldonado2250
      @dianemaldonado2250 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +17

      I think he was more afraid of being discovered also as being gay and black

  • @gladysmorgan5653
    @gladysmorgan5653 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +55

    My Daddy Refused to Pass ! He Was From Louisiana and Looked So Damn yt . He WENT To A Texas Jail,He Was put with the yt population. He Told the authorities I'm Black ! And at first they refused to Move Him. He Was Adamant Only then did they move Him.

    • @firandcurly84
      @firandcurly84 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      He was smart not " proud" it's better he told them than they found out.

    • @pink1237480
      @pink1237480 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I tell people the same thing but still think I'm mixed it's annoying to deal with. I always tell people I'm black even though I'm light skin.

    • @watchwhoyoutalkto
      @watchwhoyoutalkto 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@pink1237480Black people can be lightskin.

    • @akhesa8135
      @akhesa8135 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@watchwhoyoutalktobut black american are mixed not 100 % african

    • @angellover02171
      @angellover02171 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@akhesa8135 so what?

  • @patrickanitataylor4905
    @patrickanitataylor4905 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +93

    Walter F. White was my Great-great Uncle. 💙
    Unlike some who were "Black-passing-White", our Uncle Walter was doing what he did occasionally to infiltrate the most evil KKK for his beloved NAACP...
    Other than that, he loved his Blackness & his Black family!!!❤️
    Most Blacks who knew him, knew this about him.
    R.I.P.:
    ```°•.🕊️.🌹•💙°🕊️Uncle Walter🕊️°💙•🌹.🕊️ .•°```

    • @BORN-to-Run
      @BORN-to-Run 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Most of these people are light or brown and MIXED-RACE and would have been TREATED BADLY
      by the darker-skinned Blacks anyway!
      Why should they want to identify with their enemies!
      You have the reversed going on nowadays: Extremely Mixed-race people
      "PASSING" as Black.
      It's shameful~!

    • @bernadineward5265
      @bernadineward5265 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +19

      Thank God for your Uncle Walter White! I read years ago about how he risked his life to expose lynchings and other atrocities against Blacks. He could have lived comfortably in a White world, unbothered by the violence & injustice faced by Blacks, but he cared and he stood up!!

    • @janedoe1229
      @janedoe1229 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thank you for responding. Mr. White is one of my heroes. He sacrificed his safety and life for his race so that Blacks may have life, liberty, and happiness. His sacrifices benefitted the entire human race in America
      A few comments before this one, a commenter stated Mr. Walter White married a white woman. Is this true? I look forward to your family setting the record straight

    • @sky-pv7ff
      @sky-pv7ff 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      NACCP, what good is that organization when you see the failures of black neighborhoods and black cities. In my sanctuary city, they gave millions to the hispanic illegals so they could have enterprise, community village. But nothing for the black neighborhoods.

    • @missmichel-a
      @missmichel-a 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      👀 folks in the comments say he left his black family for a white woman

  • @markwoods4439
    @markwoods4439 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +72

    There’s long and unpleasant history of racism and discrimination😡

    • @loralarose9615
      @loralarose9615 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      As everybody stop blaming white today for crap that has nothing do with them . I never seen any be mean to black people.

  • @Perishena1
    @Perishena1 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +24

    I guess because I’ve seen so many mixed and biracial people I can tell if they are mixed . I don’t think a lot of those people passed during that time period, I think I just think a lot of people were oblivious to multiracial and biracial so they really didn’t know what it looked like so they assumed it was white .

    • @deniseberman8633
      @deniseberman8633 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      Doesn’t all of humanity have the same origin? Isn’t that what the Bible says? Heaven help us!

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Good point .......what I've noticed is black people tend to think they look white "or pass" whereas white people don't think they look white and know they have a black grandparent / great grandparent if they have thought about it at all are and are not that interested or bothered one way or other .....I have friends one black (man) and the other Scottish they have six kids and all look different 3 are as dark as the dad the others are tan with one having a yellow cast to his complexion.......he thinks people are watching him thinking he has stolen a white child....the little boy doesn't look white he look like what he is a child who has a white parent and a black parent.......

    • @mrcead
      @mrcead 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      You're giving them too much credit, they were literally triggered by black skin, period, nothing else registered socially until the zeitgeist said otherwise

    • @davyrockxx1563
      @davyrockxx1563 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      being bi-racial black father and white mother myself- I know exactly what you’re saying I usually can spot people that are mixed race I’ve seen a lot of people.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@davyrockxx1563…that’s not always true. When people have more European blood for two or more generations, what part of African are you referring to? What is mixed? I just watched an episode of Seinfeld where Elaine was dating a guy who Jerry thought was a lightskin Black man. At the end of the show the man was dating Elaine because he thought she was Spanish. The actor playing the role is of Russian heritage.

  • @michealjones592
    @michealjones592 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    I am the son of a black woman and a white man I don't know my biological father and my mother never talked about him I'm sure he was a trick ! She married a Black man his name is on my birth certificate ! He and my mother raised me but I can easily pass for white ! My Mother her sisters and her mother were all beautiful yellow Black women my grandfather was a Brown skinned Black man I have never identified as white I even used to try to fight anyone who called me white boy I grew up in the hood and had to do some crazy things before my people understood I was not to be fucked with !!!! Now I'm a old head easily mistaken for a old white man but I'm still in the hood married a few Beautiful Black women got a gang of beautiful Black children and grandchildren and I've always been a Black man !!!!!

  • @frederica1977
    @frederica1977 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +20

    My 3x great-grandfather was a free man of color from Virginia, born in 1839. After his mother died in the 1870s, he moved to San Francisco and passed as a white man. He was essentially written out of the family tree and it wasn’t until I had my Ancestry DNA done that I discovered the family secret. His son (and my ancestor I directly descend from) was a twin who eventually followed his father to San Francisco and also passed as white. His twin stayed behind in Virginia and had a family who were always listed as black. It becomes harder to trace people the closer you get to modern times. Would these black cousins accept the redheaded white person that is me? I would love to connect with them and listen to their story someday. ❤

    • @danawashington318
      @danawashington318 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      You can only try; I was recently contacted by the same type of “cousin” that is in the same position as you are and I am very much interested in linking the fabric of the quilting pattern back together to cover up my Family Tree from the damage caused by the wind blowing in the storm that was Prejudice…

    • @frederica1977
      @frederica1977 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@danawashington318 Your thoughtful comment gives me hope. Thank you, Dana. I appreciate you. 🤍

    • @JustB-cuz
      @JustB-cuz วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Most likely. Virginian colored population were so miscegenated by the 1920s that the Governor couldn’t tell Who was what, so he implemented the Racial Integrity Act in 1924. My family is from VA, and many could pass for white and did so when it suited them, but they lived as “colored”. Other people, like President Dwight Eisenhower’s mother (Orange, Va), lived as white-passing.
      If you contact your relatives, they probably won’t be surprised. People leaving the community to pass wasn’t uncommon. They probably know of your ancestors’ existence but not their fate.

    • @JustB-cuz
      @JustB-cuz วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      BTW: My grandmother and her sisters had moved to Pennsylvania and married a dark-skinned man. I used to play in their backyard in that small town. Once, the ball went over the stone wall and into the neighbor’s yard. When I went to retrieve it, the blonde lady yelled at me to stay out of her yard. She had a husband and three children who were older than I - red-headed freckled twin boys and a girl with brown hair. The kids never played with the brown kids in the neighborhood-they just glared, never spoke. I was surprised to find out years later that the white lady was my grandmother’s niece Katherine (my second cousin). Her brother Henry was one of my dad’s best friends growing up. Everybody knew who she was, but she wanted to be white, and everyone respected her wishes and left her and her white family alone. They never spoke. It must be awful to live among your relatives while pretending you are not closely related. About 40 years later, she started coming to the family reunions, but her children never did. SMH. It would have been fine if the did.

    • @frederica1977
      @frederica1977 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@JustB-cuz That makes me really sad for your family. To care so much about that stuff and miss out on so many amazing people is just really sad. I hope that her grandchildren have more tolerance and a different perspective today. When I was 8 (mid 1980’s), my father lost his job and we moved from Oregon to Exton, PA. Everyone was white and Catholic. My youngest siblings were adopted from India and Korea, we were also Protestant. People assumed my Indian sister was the half black (illegitimate) child of my eldest sister. My parents were unable to get appropriate medical care for my sister and we moved back to Oregon, leaving my father in PA for months until he could find a job there. This really stood out to me as a young child to have my siblings “othered”. I appreciate things like this video that make us all reflect on our experiences and have respectful dialogue.

  • @cassball7
    @cassball7 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

    I love the content. However, I disagree with Sally Hemmings children passing as white. They were white. I believe she was a quadroon. The one drop rule isn’t scientific. It was just a way to make whiteness pure. I wouldn’t consider someone with so much white blood black.

    • @sandybuerle5528
      @sandybuerle5528 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      According to my math, Sally's children were 1/16th black. Are kidding? Passing is not the correct term.

  • @cool_cat007smoove3
    @cool_cat007smoove3 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

    These families are still around today. These families where strict about letting darker skin people enter the family.

  • @buttah501
    @buttah501 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +31

    Your channel and content is amazing.......helps with the missing parts to the black identity. The butter pecan ice-cream explained why my momdukss loves that flavor 😅

  • @ladyluck9469
    @ladyluck9469 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

    My mom had aunts who passed. The family knew and always welcomed them during summer breaks in the 50s

  • @cindyloomis-torvi3396
    @cindyloomis-torvi3396 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    Thank you for your video. My father was definitely not white. As Americans would Describe him as an adult as Creole. But as a baby he was extremely light skinned, blue grey eyed and had blonde curly hair, so he had a white birth certificate. Until I worked on his side of the family genealogy, after having medical testing that led to genetic testing that led to numerous questions, I didn’t have any idea that without knowing he was passing. My guess is he might’ve thought about his dark skin, but being in the north that didn’t matter. His best friend was Irish and Indigenous, so they looked similar in summer, had similar height and builds.
    As an adult, He was as dark as Victorian walnut stained furniture in the summer, and dark maple in the winter. He had extremely unusual green eyes, and hair of boot black brown. When he married my mother, he had to produce his birth certificate.
    Yet, apparently his grand parents were “”German”, and “Irish”. Whereas, my genetic testing said something else, as did my gold skin that was never even close to white Europeans. But I was born a dark red head, not a Scottish one, so there forever I must be an Irish one. My mother was definitely a fully European woman, with skin that burned, freckles, and a red tint in her hair. Her mother was Jewish, but she took after her 1st Gen Irish father.
    The scientific genetic testing: European Jewish, Irish (both sides), North African, Spanish, French (the kingdom of Occitan sprawled over both Northern Spain, South Western France), Central Asian Jewish heritage, southern U.S. Creole haplo types (my family on both sides were from both north and South, depending upon timeline), 8.5 % African American, and yes, German. The most genetic history I have is Jewish, from the European, Central Asian, Spanish, and North African Ancestry. But no, we are definitely not as Anglo European as claimed. Having found some articles about Central Asians slipping into Northern German where people looked a variety of ways, then proclaimed themselves “German” on the first census, apparently as the family prospered they took on all the trappings of northern Franco Germans, except a lot of their diet was Mediterranean based due to food allergies.
    Many people coming to the American colonies as free or indentured servants did the same thing. Except those enslaved or indigenous had no choice in the matter. The other side of my family did likewise. Strange how not just light skinned African Americans, but persons from Central Asia, the Middle East and North Africa did the same thing. But considering they were Jews and Irish, who also were discriminated groups, not surprising.
    I’m so glad we can talk about these issues openly in this day and age.
    What do I identify as ? A Multi racial Jew. That is my place of home, comfort, food, and culture. But all my food allergies come from my ancestors of what is now the meeting points of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Hindu Kush. That is also where the unusual eyes come from. I met a gentleman who looked so much like my father that it threw me into shock, as he’s been deceased for a long time. This person identified as a Mountain Jew of Khazikstan, the other county that adjoins where my ancient genetics come from.
    To find someone like myself on a congregation full of German and European Jews was just a blessing.

    • @malloryjines5050
      @malloryjines5050 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Your genetics are so very interesting! How fun to try and research those different lines (but maybe frustrating too because of many dead ends you might find in the records). Our family lore on my fathers side always said we had cherokee (like so many) from ancestors who were born and raised in Appalachia since the late 1600’s. We even have a book showing that particular gggrandfather who married a native woman. Well, low and behold had our dna tested about 10 years ago and 0% native of ANY TRIBE! Neither did my sons or any of those cousins who contacted me through Ancestry saying they had zero as well. We were told all our lives about what percentage we were. Instead, we’re very boring UK and related Northern European ancestry. My DIL, who is so white she glows in the dark has 2% Congo and Senegal, and also has the Cherokee and her family is on the rolls. We can chuckle about it now, but I wish we were a bit more diverse! LOL

  • @gerald4384
    @gerald4384 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    It takes more than light skin to pass. Remember Alex Haley's "Queen". Currently, my aunt can pass better than anyone. She must argue with people that she is Black; she is not mixed.

  • @mwalker818walker8
    @mwalker818walker8 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +21

    My Great Grandmother was Native and Caucasian Married a Black Man and we been black ever since. I took an ancestry test and the truth was there my the roots showed up but Grandma was brave she could've passed but carried her lil Black babies and was proud and said F racism

  • @Mimi-ht6xr
    @Mimi-ht6xr 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +39

    Neither of my grandfathers were Black in Louisiana but BOTH passed as Black to be with their nonwhite women. Since miscegenation could get you seriously harmed, no one cared who white passing and lightskin “black”people married as long as the partner wasn’t white. We never tell these stories but they exist as well.
    When l was a teen a white passing older cousin took me to a Jewish enclave for a weekend. I had a good time. I even had a young man who wanted to be my beau. When l got home, l told mama all. She was outraged! I never saw or heard from that cousin again. Many years later mama explained the stain of ethnic cleansing and race passing. 😔

    • @andreabrown4541
      @andreabrown4541 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      Mr. Ziegler from my hometown in Arkansas did the same thing: pass for black. The black community kept it on the down low for obvious reasons. Pearl Bailey's husband passed for black when they were performing in the South.

    • @peachygal4153
      @peachygal4153 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I have a DNA cousin whose white great grandmother passed as "light" the family never knew until she found records of this woman's parents. anyway, this woman was my grandmother's first cousin, so she is my 3rd cousin once removed. Oh, this was 1920's Mississippi so no shocker this woman passed to protect her husband. anyway, she wanted to know if I had ever heard any stories but of course I would not have. The family would not have told that. Now my grandma once told me a story of a "neighbor" who married a man she thought was white but after their baby was born, he started looking part black, once he got about 6 months old. He admitted he was actually Creole, and they got an annulment, and he took the baby to his mother. Now the Jim Crow south they would have had no choice once the whit family noticed how the baby looked, but I wonder if maybe my grandma was telling about her cousin in veiled terms, and she had second thoughts about losing her little family and found them and passed as light? It would have been easy enough to be believable if several of his family looked white.

    • @celticmulato2609
      @celticmulato2609 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@andreabrown4541How can one pass as Black when Sub Saharan African phenotype is very different from European phenotype!??

    • @sky-pv7ff
      @sky-pv7ff 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I find it hard to believe that a white person would want to pass as white. Even today, whites don't want to live in black neighborhoods or. They seem to want to live either in white or mixed neighborhoods. The educated interracial couples will live in the suburbs. While the other will live in working class racially mixed neighborhoods.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@celticmulato2609….do you live in America? Shemar Moore, Davon Franklin, Michael Ealy, the late Prince, Beyoncé, Zendaya, Montell Williams, Halle Berry, Mariah Carey, Phylicia Rashad, Dwayne Johnson, Smokey Robinson, Raven Simone, etc are ALL considered Black, regardless of their ethnic makeup.

  • @Malene1992
    @Malene1992 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I'm Mexican American, but both parents born in Mexico, I'm so white /w green eyes. My mom always told me to try to pass as white to avoid racism.

  • @kingpin7666
    @kingpin7666 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +86

    I understand why somebody would pass as white. I’m even related to people who made the choice to pass as white………. But I just can’t respect somebody who forsakes their family and blackness.

    • @tammi67able
      @tammi67able 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +24

      Back then I don’t blame the atleast the got treated like human beings

    • @southernladybrown5092
      @southernladybrown5092 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      Nonetheless Even light were treated like dark skinned people Don’t be misled❤❤❤

    • @pattrell5257
      @pattrell5257 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      I think that if you didn't use it to help the black community, then you might as well as be a Stephen/Stephanie(django reference) that can pass whereas Stephen could not...That being said, you might as well have been a racist white person if that is what you did! I also realize that they were undercover. So, I realize that these people could not be activists, but they could have secretly used their privilege to help instead of ignoring their race once they moved on up...I mean, your husband had to work and probably had a maid(easy living for these wives); the man had even more freedom and made the money...

    • @J.A.G.618
      @J.A.G.618 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      😮​@@southernladybrown5092yes because you can see that they were not all White. The pictures that they show on this video these people you can tell that they are not White. They only show few pictures of actual people that were White passing. That's supposed to represent Sally hemings the girl slave that were forced to sleep with Jefferson she was not White passing, you can see that she was mixed blood, young white looking man that went undercover he was White passing. Because he was mostly White. That was a real picture of white person that could pass as a 100% white person. He probably had less than 25% African blood in him.

    • @Hellurrrrr
      @Hellurrrrr 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@pattrell5257sis, you couldn’t support black people AND be treated kindly unless you were wealthy. Most white passers, light skins born by two darker parents, would have to create huge lies of why they ran away, and don’t have a birth certificate. Remember, before 1960 your birth certificate had to say your race. These people had to make new names and ABIDE by a white accent. Most white passers were killed, because you can’t just run away from YOURSELF- they were still black. And that proved to be fatal.

  • @ariesone1878
    @ariesone1878 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

    Thank you. Liked and shared publicly.

  • @olgaryer1001
    @olgaryer1001 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I guess coming from a culture and family where auch things are common I find this conversation rather mundane. Such things happened. For many it was a survival skill.

  • @Chamis-dt4wc
    @Chamis-dt4wc 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +30

    Obviously it was much easier for " black " people with majority non-black ancestry & DNA to ' pass ' as white.

    • @masehoart7569
      @masehoart7569 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      But this is exactly the point - that the one-drop rule which was supposed to “protect” whiteness like the holy grail was devious nonsense! All those laws which prohibited any kind of sexual contact, affairs, marriage between whites & Blacks & other POCs - invented by white men & broken by them!

    • @janedoe1229
      @janedoe1229 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      You need a black history class. Millions of blacks passed passed for not only as white but for Jews, Italian, Indian, East Asian and etc. People from other groups passed, too. There chances of successful passing wasn't greater.

    • @Chamis-dt4wc
      @Chamis-dt4wc 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@janedoe1229 In order for a " black " person to successfully pass as a non-black person.. that " black " person has to have sufficient non-black ancestry and DNA. My learning and experiences go way beyond a " black history class " especially if that class includes some biased teachings as well. (Yes, such ' black history classes ' aren't exempt from human biases either)

  • @shuntalefairbanks6931
    @shuntalefairbanks6931 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +31

    The Rock acknowledges his African american side

    • @robinlacue3431
      @robinlacue3431 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +14

      Rocky Johnson was from Canada. The Rock's father was Canadian he's not African American; but I see your point he acknowledges his Black side.

    • @robertmarley8852
      @robertmarley8852 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      What is African American

    • @J.A.G.618
      @J.A.G.618 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      ​@@robertmarley8852😮 people that is a mostly African descent in their blood born and raised in America. Or become a citizen,

    • @andreabrown4541
      @andreabrown4541 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      ​@@J.A.G.618the born and raised is correct. Not the become a citizen. How do we keep getting this wrong! Given all the public and academic commentary that followed Jesse Jackson's press release.

    • @mgbl2808
      @mgbl2808 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@J.A.G.618actually a person with African DNA who was born in America. Doesn’t have to be mostly African.

  • @blairintheburbs
    @blairintheburbs 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    My grandmother grew up in Alabama would tell me about her family members who lived their lives as white passing. She too looked white passing. She had blue eyes and was VERY fair skinned.

    • @SunShine-vo8kj
      @SunShine-vo8kj 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      She was a blue eyed devil😮

  • @newdayvlogz2387
    @newdayvlogz2387 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    My previous co-workers passed for white....one was very evil towards us black folk....he tried ultra hard to prove that he was not us....but deep down I could see his inner torment😢😢😢

  • @michaels7566
    @michaels7566 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +35

    It’s called survival.

  • @mscardioqueen
    @mscardioqueen 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Why would you use Arianna Grande's pic? She's not mixed with black. She's a white woman of Italian descent.

  • @EclecticDD
    @EclecticDD 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +27

    You should have used Halsey's picture not Ariana Grande.

    • @immanuelcityrefugechurch3433
      @immanuelcityrefugechurch3433 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Because she is Hispanic some of her relatives are dark brown

    • @louisegross3886
      @louisegross3886 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Wth

    • @PersianCatMeow
      @PersianCatMeow 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Halsey doesn't pass or pretend to be. She is open about her racial identity and the fact that she doesnt look black when she is.

    • @IamThe1NotThe2
      @IamThe1NotThe2 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What about cash Warren and him Jessica alone kids

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@PersianCatMeow…Halsey is a biracial in the purest sense and she knows it. The fair skin, straight hair, and sharp facial features elevates her to a unique standing. 🙄

  • @chedebnam6025
    @chedebnam6025 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +24

    There is a great novel called did you hear about Kitty Carr. It's a must read.

  • @writeralbertlanier3434
    @writeralbertlanier3434 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +27

    Inaccurate video
    Passing was undertaken not by black people but mixed race people a n d multiracial people.
    For some reason, the whole aspect of racial passing is presented falsely as Black people giving up.their ancestry when in fact this is not and could never be the case.

    • @thewordsmith5440
      @thewordsmith5440 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Black Jazz singers did it in the 1940-1960's. There was a large Muslim community among jazz singers and many would go abroad to learn Arabic to read the Quran and upon returning they would speak Arabic put on Turbans or thawb and dress as Arabs and be permitted into all whites-only facilities.

    • @adpowell1414
      @adpowell1414 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Blacks like to claim multiracials because the black inferiority complex makes blacks desire to "improve" their racial stock with the DNA of their hated but adored "enemy."

    • @samanthamcgrew5221
      @samanthamcgrew5221 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Most blk Americans have some European ancestry, due to rampant sexual abuse of female slaves by slave owners and overseers; basically we’re all some percentage multiracial, some more than others

    • @ravenrebel3183
      @ravenrebel3183 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

      This. It’s not “passing” if it’s who you actually are. It’s just mixed people choosing their obvious and dominant ancestry 🤷🏻‍♀️. I’ve done the same.

    • @timeforchange3786
      @timeforchange3786 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      They were called black because back in Jim Crow times having black ancestry meant you were black. Like the girl in the picture with the black boy. They were both considered black because she was enslaved.

  • @bevdozier-jones8105
    @bevdozier-jones8105 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    Until a Black child is born, then there are real issues. My paternal grandmother and her sisters passed. Folks must have been blind.

  • @ShobinThomas-z7i
    @ShobinThomas-z7i 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +56

    God bless black people who passed

    • @tammi67able
      @tammi67able 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

      At least they got treated like humans

    • @kmfdm5
      @kmfdm5 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      I hope that’s sardonic

    • @AntajuanGrady
      @AntajuanGrady 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

      *mixed people

    • @Hellurrrrr
      @Hellurrrrr 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ⁠@@AntajuanGrady because mixed men were kicked into the field at the age of ten- all of us black Americans got some white in us. That’s why light skins are born- you yourself are most likely 20-30% white. Unless your white, then why are you being racist? You don’t belong to this conversation. Light skins, like me, can be super super pale with an Afro. Some are born like me with white features, and can straighten their hell to balding and pass

    • @user-nw7oc9uz9g
      @user-nw7oc9uz9g 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      God bless the black the black people who passed for white who helped their people. The ones who did not,
      let them face the same fate as the slave master.

  • @mariemarie75-x6v
    @mariemarie75-x6v 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    What some people may not realize is that Black family members often encouraged passing as a way for relatives who could do so to potentially lead a better life. Although passing still occurs today, it’s not as prevalent as it once was. The "one drop rule" was designed to categorize those who could pass as White, not those who couldn’t. Later on, propaganda, such as the film "Pinky,” "Imitation of life” depicted the tragic consequences of passing and often shamed those who did. I was reminded of the concept of passing today while reading a Jewish forum, where some Jewish individuals, due to antisemitism, felt compelled to pass as non-Jewish. It’s a sad situation, regardless of the context.

  • @KaiLuna1111
    @KaiLuna1111 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I just saw a story about a white man that fell in love with a black women and changed his whole life to be with her -He was also famous in the 1800's so of course the white folks talking about the story (today) couldn't understand why he would give up his white life style "previlage" to become black. We are the human race people and this man fell in love instantly he wanted this woman and no one-not even a life and a career as a celibrated white man was going to keep him from love. He was happy, he moved to brooklyn and had children and didn't look back he never told his family who he really was cause he didn't want to be found out. That's GUTS AND LOVE.

  • @JubeiKibagamiFez
    @JubeiKibagamiFez 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +35

    9:46 "A Jazz Man's Blues" is also good movie depicting this.

    • @LeTriceStephen
      @LeTriceStephen 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Thank you, I'm going to look this movie up and watch. 🙏🏽

    • @autumnsmom1117
      @autumnsmom1117 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@LeTriceStephen
      It's on Netflix

    • @sharonpreston2420
      @sharonpreston2420 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Another exceptional movie was "Imitation of Life" my grandmother made all us of watch it over and over.

    • @JubeiKibagamiFez
      @JubeiKibagamiFez 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@sharonpreston2420 Oh.... Thank you for the recommendation.

  • @Penrose-wi6tx
    @Penrose-wi6tx 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +46

    You’re not going to talk about how Walter White left his black wife and married a white women, which tarnished his legacy. His children didn’t want to have anything to do with him.

    • @janedoe1229
      @janedoe1229 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      Is this true? I never heard of this or I forgot this history. I still make mention of Mr. White to this very day. Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought he would marry a white woman. I feel this way because of the work he did. He saw first hand what a white woman was capable of.

    • @celticmulato2609
      @celticmulato2609 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      ​@janedoe1229 The man was White with only an admixture of Black ancestry. His phenotype is European and that White woman look just like him which is White! SMH

    • @rroadmap
      @rroadmap 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      ​@@janedoe1229Just because one White woman does something doesn't mean another one will. Please, let's not judge anybody by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. I take people on their own merit, not as a group. I understand that we all may be wary of certain groups based on previous negative experiences. Profiling is how we protect ourselves when we have to make immediate quick decisions for safety. But I would consider judging by the color of a person's skin otherwise, to be racist.

    • @JewelTips
      @JewelTips 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@janedoe1229It's true unfortunately, he actually had an affair with her for almost 20 years before leaving his wife for her. He was worried that he wouldn't be able to continue in leadership with the NAACP if he left his wife for her but he ultimately did.

    • @hwgray
      @hwgray 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      "You’re not going to talk about..." because it has nothing to do with passing.

  • @Saundra-w9u
    @Saundra-w9u 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    My great grandmother could have passed for white because she was Cherokee and white. Growing up we didn't know or questioned the way she looked because she had long hair past her hips and my great grandfather was a fine handsome dark skinned man and they had 11 beautiful children and one of their son's had passed away back in 2022 at 98 years old and he was still working on cars because he had his own business. My great grandparents last and youngest twin daughter is still here and is gorgeous as ever in her eighties which makes her the mantiarch of the family during family reunions and she definitely can pass for white but she chose not to even though she once was married to a white man before. This history behind my great grandmother could have passed for white was not her plan because she had 3 other siblings that didn't have the same father as her and they definitely couldn't pass and she helped raised them with her mother. And till this very day I'm more closer to my great grandmother's siblings children which are my 3rd cousins and our children all favors each other which is so crazy that it seems like we are all back in that era when my great grandmother was born back in 1896. 🌹👏🖤🤎✊

    • @jamiemohan2049
      @jamiemohan2049 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Was her father white? How was your great great grandmother viewed having a mixed child back then? If your great great grandmother was the white one, im sure that would have caused a huge scandal back in the day. I'm just v interested and don't mean any bad for asking as interracial relationships were taboo back then, rarely even happening out of consent.

    • @Saundra-w9u
      @Saundra-w9u 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@jamiemohan2049 well her mother was basically used as a sex s__ve at 15 by 2 of the owners son's. Back then the indians and blacks were like a community 🖤🤎. My ggm mother who was Cherokee also had 3 other children by a black man and everything was family as always. My ggm was bullied because of the was she looked back then and they teased her calling her white girl.

    • @Saundra-w9u
      @Saundra-w9u 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yes her father's were white because they didn't do any dna testing back then.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Saundra-w9u…people always say Amerindians and blacks were together and that’s not true. There were and are Amerindians who prefer each other. Most are in Arizona, New Mexico, and a few other places. 🙄

    • @Saundra-w9u
      @Saundra-w9u วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@@Mimi-ht6xrI know my ancestors heritage and we continue the reunions each year to preserve the history of our culture.

  • @The1ByTheSea
    @The1ByTheSea 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Sally Hemings was of mixed ancestry :mulato and Jefferson was white:their quadroon or octagoon children were basically white .;so they were not really passing .In the Jin Crow southern laws that up to 1/8 black was black; but in the North they could be white.Its like saying today ,a black person who is 25% white is white ;this would make people such as Beyonce or Vanessa Williams white . So if someone is 1/4 black or 1/8 they are basically white .

    • @angellover02171
      @angellover02171 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @The1ByTheSea lol nope. They knew that Jeffersons Black kids were Black because most white people were Elmer's glue white. Jefferson's whites descendants were big mad about the Black descendants' existence. Anyone can say whatever they want about their race. All that matters is how people see you.

  • @williambell4576
    @williambell4576 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    Appreciate the information for those who do not know, it is no different today, not just for (white people), but also blacks, can you see it in marriage rate, of all black athletes that make more than 2 million dollars in a year, it is seen in Black culture, who they will pick out a crowd, and say she, is pretty.

  • @numonesweethrt
    @numonesweethrt 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    My mother was born in 1916 in Wisconsin and migrated to Austin, TX as a child. She had me very late in her life and always reminded me that she was "1/4 white". She was a chef and a caterer who migrated to California from racist Austin, passed for white, and catered parties in Hollywood years before she had me... oh how proud she was of herself! 💜U Mommy💜

    • @hwgray
      @hwgray 16 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      "1/4 white" Don't you mean "3/4 white"? I'm 1/4 white and ain't no way I'm passing.

    • @numonesweethrt
      @numonesweethrt 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@hwgray All I know is what she told me and what my daddy said. She died when I was 12 but I remember her to be very beautiful and VERY light with freckles and stringy hair and she used a skin bleaching cream every day.

    • @aksamhuda7
      @aksamhuda7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@numonesweethrtyou can only pass for white if you are at least 3/4white otherwise forget it

  • @janegarner6739
    @janegarner6739 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    During the 19th c, as the US seized the remaining Indian states/homelands in the Southeast & force-marched those peoples to Indian Territory, the laws became changed so that anyone not officially recognized as Native could not claim that ancestry. They had to be signed up as either Black or merely because oc the US under federal law. Since quite a few indians from these nations did not sign the US rolls durng Forced Removal but rather fled or lived in caves till they could flee or come out without being imprisoned or shot.
    It's a very complicated history & it varies from one native nation to another, but many natives who didn't sign up with the US government during & just after Forced Removal were forced to pass as either Black or white, while also being legally forced by the US to register as white or Black, not Am. Indian.
    These escapees from the Forced Removal period in the Southeast also had to pass as white or black outside their small, usually rural communities. My own ancestors did this.
    Family history gets very confused re native ancestry among people whose ancestors escaped rather than being force-marched to Indian Territory. Hundreds if not thousands of rural communities formed during the Removal period, with the founders forced to sign up as black or white. The laws vary from one native nation to another, but a good many natives did escape forced removal & consequently were forced to pass as white or black. Claiming native ancestry was illegal for these people for most of the 19th c. through the 20th.
    Tracing legal records of ancestry in the US is very confusing, as most natives who escaped the Forced Removals were not allowed to claim their native ancestry.
    Your 19th-into-20th c ancestors might be listed as white or black merely because your ancestors didn't follow the US Forced Removal programs.

  • @MsDisneylandlover
    @MsDisneylandlover 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    Thanks for sharing this info.

  • @victoriabusche7314
    @victoriabusche7314 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Eartha Kit talked about not being dark enough for African Americans during her childhood. There's probably plenty of problems either way.

  • @l1brada
    @l1brada 21 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Thank you for the video. Just want to point out Arianna Grande isn't white passing, she's a pale Italian who's black fishing.

  • @stvslas
    @stvslas 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    How ironic in the context of this tragic history that Trump would accuse VP Harris of "turning black" for political purposes.

    • @SweetTea-Stephens
      @SweetTea-Stephens 6 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Because she ain’t black and yes she “turned” black for exactly political reason. Just like she turned a “southern accent” on for political reason when in the south; which is a slap in the face for us true southerners who get made fun of for our accents.
      She is a NOT BLACK AT ALL. NOT A DROP!
      Her dad lived in Jamaica but he ain’t black. Just like the white Jamaicans aren’t black, they are white people from England usually, who were born and live in Jamaica. But heritage wise they were and still are European. Their lines most likely come from when England controlled Jamaica. That doesn’t make them black.
      Kackling Kamala’s father is eastern INDIAN and IRISH and her mother is eastern INDIAN!! Not a drop of African blood in them!!!
      Her family is EASTERN INDIAN!! Photos of them in EASTERN INDIAN GARB BECAUSE THEY ARE PRIMARILY INDIAN. That bitch herself has interviews from the past PROUDLY claiming her EASTERN INDIAN heritage!! Even about being one of the first EASTERN INDIAN political women.
      More specifically her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was born in Chennai and immigrated to the US to attend a doctoral program at UC Berkeley. Chennai is in the bay of Bengali in EASTERN INDIA!
      Her father, Donald J. Harris was raised in Jamaica for sure but, his father, Hamilton Brown Harris, was Irish as you can see his family tree back to when they came to Jamaica. His many times great grandfather, Richard Harris, 1750, Poss. Ireland (which is like Dublin IRELAND)..
      (Poss is a northern English regional dialect, Irish English, and northern Scottish English. Ie: Oxford English Dictionary).
      He died in St. Catherine Parish, Jamaica in 1817. Sooooooooooooo, NOT BLACK ONE SINGLE DROP! You can photos of Mr. Brown Harris and he’s whiter than I am (where I’m Jewish, German, native Indian, some African small amount, and English- and her grandfather is whiter than my whole family!).
      The maternal line through Oscar is also IRISH! Kamala has a GENETIC link to County Antrim, through her grandfather Mr. Brown!’s maternal line!
      County Antrim is: County Antrim (named after the town of Antrim, from IRISH Aontroim, meaning 'lone ridge') is one of the six counties of Northern IRELAND, located within the historic province of Ulster (Wikipedia) (emphasis mine).
      The line starts with Oscar’s mother- Christiana Angelina McKenzie (Wallace), 1904, Saint Elizabeth, Jamaica. Her paternal grandfather, Hamilton Brown, Sr., Esq., was from Ballymoney, County Antrim, Ireland, 1776 and died in Browns Town, St. Ann Parish, British Jamaica.
      His own ancestors would have been participants in a colonial project known as the “Plantation of Ulster” in the early 17th century that displaced the native Irish and replaced them with settlers, mostly from Scotland.
      Mr. Brown made his fortune as a lawyer and an enslaver in St. Ann’s Parish, which he later renamed Brown’s Town. Of which further descendants would be born in this Browns Town. Including Kamala’s dad.
      Now Christina’s maternal line only goes to her mother who is, Mary Melvina Brown. She was born in Jamaica West Indies. And she, Mary Melvina Brown, wife of Hamilton Brown, is listed as " white " in Baptisms of child 1879 records. I’ve seen them with my own eyes. They are Irish white on both Kamala’s fathers’ paternal and maternal lines NOT A DROP OF BLACK AFRICAN OR BLACK JAMAICAN. Slave owners white. Now that maternal line of Mary not being able to record past her doesn’t mean she was Irish, eastern Indians were considered white/Caucasian from being from Europe/Asia areas. Even in America records of eastern Indians would say white. When you look at photos of the maternal line you clearly see the eastern Indian! The maternal line of the father is where the Indian comes in and the paternal (both paternal and maternal lines in her grandfather line- are Irish Irish Irish Irish!!)!
      So her father’s side is Irish as hell on his fathers sides and Indian through his mothers maternal line.
      Kamala dad: paternal (then paternal and maternal- white Irish as hell! And one maternal line of Indian it seems (that’s the white record baptism) all through Oscar Kamala’s paternal grandpa.
      Donald Harris mother line is- Beryl Madeline Harris- her father- Patrick Althanasous Finnagan, her mother- Orah “Miss Iris” Finnagan. Patrick Finnagan is the father of Patrick Althanasous Finnagan. Guess where he’s from: Patrick an Irish as hell name: he’s from: County Galway, Ireland! Died in Jamaica. So that’s when that line came to Jamaica. Now oraha father has no birth or death place listed. Name John Allen (not a typical Jamaican black name but okay), her brother name was: Egbert Rolland (Moses) Allen- a traditional Catholic/christian IRISH name and surname too. Allen is a Celtic traditional IRISH surname! He was also buried in the ST. ANN PARISH (Catholic as most Irish are, and almost every single person from her father’s side both parental and maternal were too).
      Now Oprah’s mother is- Joanna Elizabeth McCook. Father is Peter Moses, buried at the same St. Anne’s Parish as literally EVERYONE ELSE! No mother info recorded.
      So she’s Indian and Irish white as hell!
      She is not of the African or Jamaican black heritage/race/dna! Just because the us Supreme Court ruled Jamaica as its category of race and considered black of the African race, DOES NOT make everyone who was born or raised there- BLACK OF THE AFRICAN RACE as genetics show black Jamaicans to be dna wise from mostly!.

  • @joyslabaugh8286
    @joyslabaugh8286 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Thank you for this.
    Oh, the tears of the heart. One, cannot choose without giving up, something dear.

  • @lapetitefleur3482
    @lapetitefleur3482 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    First story reminded me of this Indian-American student shaving his head and passing for black to get into college as asians are now not considered underprivileged.

    • @angellover02171
      @angellover02171 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @lapetitefleur3482 that was Mindy Kaling's, brother. The truth is he wasn't a great student an that's why he wasn't accepted to most medical schools he applied to. He randomly decided shave his hair and cut his eyelashes short to appear Black. Who knows if it helped at all.

    • @lapetitefleur3482
      @lapetitefleur3482 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@angellover02171 holy crap I need to look into to this!

  • @rocksiirose4536
    @rocksiirose4536 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    @2:25 the distant cousin married a white man while passing for white. If I were in that situation I would have been concerned that one or more of my children may have been darker than what is the norm for two white parents. Now the next generation may very well have had some melanated children.

    • @AF-tf6px
      @AF-tf6px 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Watch the movie called the human stain. About a light-skinned black man passing for white.

    • @adpowell1414
      @adpowell1414 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Don't fall for the "black throwback baby" myth. That doesn't happen. If it were true, white-identified Puerto Ricans would be spawning "black babies" all the time.

    • @adpowell1414
      @adpowell1414 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@AF-tf6px "The Human Stain" is a racist film (and a racist book) promoting the myth of white racial purity. There is no such thing as a "black" person "passing" for white.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You can actually breed out a bloodline. It’s happened in my family and l’m sure many others. For example: lightskin Chas Barkley married a ww. His white passing daughter married a white man. Their child is white. Another example: Megan Markle is biracial. Married a white man. Their children are white.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      That’s not always the case. You can breed out the family bloodline in as little as two generations.

  • @LoveYah1
    @LoveYah1 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I had a roomie in college who was white, she always kept her hair in a ponytail. One day she taken her hair out of a ponytail her hair was sooo kinky but straight kinky. She was talking about how she hates her hair and doesn’t know what to do with it. One day she was showing me pictures of her family white parents, blonde hair blue eye sister, but her brother looked like a mixed brutha. I asked bluntly yall have the same parents she said yes. Then I thought about her hair too, I was like someone passed for white in your family and their genes showed up lol. I even met these two brothers, one worked with me who was white and extremely gingered. He wanted to introduce me to his older brother, his brother looked like a pale skin black man with extremely ginger hair like his brother. I am not going to lie my coworker was cute, but his brother was fine.

  • @carolynandrade2648
    @carolynandrade2648 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Excellent. 2 stories: I married a Cape Verde man, Ellis Island did not know how to classify the Cape Verdians. If one could read and write it was a plus on one's immigration checklist. . His people could read and write and were classified as white. Next, my best friend married a man whose father's people were from Louisianna . Mom was very white. 9 kids, all classified as white. My husband took one look at my friend's father in law and said "he's passing" 30 years later the dad died- Creole - Louisiana. My son has beautiful golden brown skin and straight blond hair (now balding) . Me ? I have zero melanin. 99.9 white .1% Native American. We make beautiful people

    • @TaurusMoon-hu3pd
      @TaurusMoon-hu3pd 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I'm from Louisiana and am half cajun/creole. The one thing I miss about Louisiana is that in most places no one cares because just about everyone is mixed.

    • @angellover02171
      @angellover02171 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @carolynandrade2648 the original term for Creole in Louisiana was the mixture of Spainish and Fench people. later, rich white creoles started having free black mistresses. Even the lightest ones were considered Black.

  • @RuralmoneyOfficial
    @RuralmoneyOfficial 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    As a black person, 😂 I am studying the one drop rule, 3/5ths of a human, citizenship, etc.

  • @nicolebenton2283
    @nicolebenton2283 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

    Shalom excellent video ❤❤❤❤

  • @Dovelunalove
    @Dovelunalove 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    my dad is from Nigeria 🇳🇬 my mother is from Mexico, 🇲🇽yet I pass as white, because that is what OTHER ppl see me as.

  • @maureencora1
    @maureencora1 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

    I Wonder Sometimes Not White But Don't Want to Be Black To Be Treated Like a Equal Human Being.? What a World?

  • @leg414
    @leg414 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    There were thousands about int he U.S. in my time...But the bravest and truest of Blacks...Were those that looked Caucasian or other non- Black race...And proudly just who and what they were and corrected those that said or thought otherwise...Despite any advantages they could have gotten...Could say more...Peace

  • @toniwatkins4483
    @toniwatkins4483 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    They were not passing they were just like their fathers an how many white peoples still passing right today that don’t say their mothers or black ❤

  • @jmanhope1745
    @jmanhope1745 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +15

    When should we cease using the misnomer of black, red, white, yellow people? Who started this misnomer? WHY? Are various skin tones found on The Continent, even without miscegenation? Are all skin tones on Planet Earth between very dark brown and very light brown? Must we pursue Dr. ML King Jr's Dream: Judge not by skin color but judge by content of character?

    • @robertmarley8852
      @robertmarley8852 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      As k Gaza

    • @AntonioCunningham-jr2oj
      @AntonioCunningham-jr2oj 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Rather it's race or without race if I don't know you how can people judge you by your character please tell me that right there?

    • @jmanhope1745
      @jmanhope1745 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      ​@@AntonioCunningham-jr2oj without knowing a person you can observe behavior of a person and determine the content of a person's character. If we judge by "race", when is he/she no longer one particular "race" but another "race", since there is DEFINITELY overlap of physical characteristics in mankind?

    • @linusthexy6245
      @linusthexy6245 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      It was started by the British colonists during the mid to late 1600s as a system of social order to distinguish differences between African slaves and Irish slaves. The Irish were easier to blend in than the Africans. In Spanish colonies they did not have miscegenation laws like the British, that's why they don't say black/white etc. in South America.

    • @IThtso247
      @IThtso247 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      This man also greatly contributed to the misconception and division of white supremacy:
      Charles Darwin formulated his bold theory in private in 1837-39, after returning from a voyage around the world aboard HMS Beagle, but it was not until two decades later that he finally gave it full public expression in On the Origin of Species (1859), a book that has deeply influenced modern Western society and thought.

  • @Olive_O_Sudden
    @Olive_O_Sudden 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    That's not a portrait of Sally Hemings; it's a modern artist's conception. There are no contemporary portraits of Hemings, but she was described as 'near-white', looking very much like her half-sister, and was counted in a later census as white.

  • @64HomeMade
    @64HomeMade 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    And then you get a white American man trying to pass as a black man, ' Black like me' a book on his experiences in the southern states of America. What he discovered straight away was that white Americans only saw colour and when he applied for an office job he was told " he could only get a job no white man would do, absolutely fascinating and tragic book.

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      It's a great book. I am mixed Portuguese and used to have a Black tan in the Sumner and lighter skin in the winter. Some of my experiences with other people were similar to his experiences.

  • @donalddavis6689
    @donalddavis6689 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Don't Get Me Wrong!! I Love Everyone And Everybody Regardless Of Race 🙏 And The Color Of A Person Skin Color!!! I Love All Of My Parents/And Their Parent!! Parent's 🕊️!! For Telling Them About Thier Heritage!! Of Coming From Africa 🌍!! Mixing With The Cherokees Indians 🦬 And The Blackfoot Indians 🦬!! With 25 Percent Of Caucasian. But!! I'm Proud Of Still Being A Black Man 🖤 🦬.

    • @deniseberman8633
      @deniseberman8633 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I’m proud to be Human! So many mixtures in all of us that why should color matter anymore in this day and age. Just because a black person looks white doesn’t mean they’re trying to pass as white if they have white skin then they have white skin. So what!

  • @AS-hh4tc
    @AS-hh4tc 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    My mothers mom was biracial. My mother was very fair and my father was dark skin. All my cousins from my mothers side a much lighter skin than me or my siblings. When I was around my cousins I didnt realized that I was different and were treated differently by other black adults and even other kids.

  • @cmhughes8057
    @cmhughes8057 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you for sharing, this needs to get out there. I went to a school that taught this but I don’t think many do now and that needs to change.

  • @Butterfly1798
    @Butterfly1798 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +27

    Please understand this is what they had to do back then so some ppl should not get upset

    • @universaleducationsystems2722
      @universaleducationsystems2722 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      That's right

    • @jamiemohan2049
      @jamiemohan2049 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Not only that, most people who 'passed' were 75%+ white anyway. So it wasn't unreasonable for them to identify as white anyway. They practically are. I've never met someone who was 50% white and 50% black who passed. They are always at least 75% or more white with partial black ancestry. However, due to Jim Crow laws as I'm sure you know, anyone with any form of black blood was considered black. That is fairly silly, given that if you go back far enough, most of us are slightly mixed race.

    • @The1ByTheSea
      @The1ByTheSea 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I do not understand why people get so upset and bitter .The times were the times at the time .

    • @janedoe1229
      @janedoe1229 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Passing for white is not a past thing. People are passing now to acquire jobs, housing and other opportunities. Passing is not a thing of the past

    • @BayouBarbie504
      @BayouBarbie504 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Not true. They didn’t “have” to. They chose to pass. I personally couldn’t imagine denying my identity for comfort.❤

  • @abdulazizclare9545
    @abdulazizclare9545 20 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    This took place in the Caribbean first as we are ground zero of the Colombian exchange. We are the first to mix with European, Native Americans and Africans. Passing is common in Caribbean families mix race people.

  • @gina_PR
    @gina_PR 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Here in Puerto Rico is very common seeing people neglecting african heritage because of white passing, but check their parents or grandparents

  • @Boston1995-y9f
    @Boston1995-y9f 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I love passing as white.

  • @jarriusjefferson3528
    @jarriusjefferson3528 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    So sad what happened to all family members on my Moms side never knew them ,saw them 1 time.Never knew any ov my fathers ppl.😢Never had any family reunions like other families didnt know them.

  • @nikkiashful
    @nikkiashful 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +29

    Why was Ariana Grande in here?

    • @EclecticDD
      @EclecticDD 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      He may have meant to use Halsey.

    • @nikkiashful
      @nikkiashful 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

      @@EclecticDD That makes sense. I was like Ariana is not Black at all 🤣

    • @kimjohnson8471
      @kimjohnson8471 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      ​@@EclecticDDWait....Halsey is black?😮

    • @EclecticDD
      @EclecticDD 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@kimjohnson8471 Her father is mixed. Google it. She doesn't hide or deny it.

    • @AntonioCunningham-jr2oj
      @AntonioCunningham-jr2oj 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Actually Ariana grande is really a boy it was not a girl go look up transvestigation please Ariana grande is not a girl at all

  • @user-ti5is5ov2m
    @user-ti5is5ov2m 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    And the Rock never ever tried to pass as white or black. He has always been loud and clear, he is neither.

    • @EclecticDD
      @EclecticDD 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +17

      He is part Black and never denied, nor could deny his Black father. His other heritage is not white, but Pacific Islander.

    • @southernladybrown5092
      @southernladybrown5092 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      @@EclecticDD Exactly Black ❤❤❤❤

    • @edwinabeanum6640
      @edwinabeanum6640 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      He only liked white women.

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      @@southernladybrown5092…Rock is black Canadian and Samoan and married a Cuban. Their daughter is American with Cuban, Samoan, and black Canadian heritage.

    • @southernladybrown5092
      @southernladybrown5092 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Mimi-ht6xr Biology follow the Father nuggets

  • @Jenjen-qc5eq
    @Jenjen-qc5eq 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It wasn't just Blacks who passed for White the actress Merle Oberon was South Asian, ie Indian, and passed for white she refused to acknowledge her darker-skinned Indian relatives.

  • @p4rt_t1me_g0d
    @p4rt_t1me_g0d 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    My great grandfather passed as white to escape the south, he was black ever since.

  • @robertmarley8852
    @robertmarley8852 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    I can't mama.....I'm a Whyte woman now

    • @ahamed6702
      @ahamed6702 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      See this is the bad portion of passing. No more family

    • @louisegross3886
      @louisegross3886 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Mmmm

    • @Mimi-ht6xr
      @Mimi-ht6xr 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@ahamed6702…that’s only if you cared about that family 🙄

  • @norama3998
    @norama3998 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    قال الرّسول محمّد المُجتبى صلّى الله عليه و سلّم في العنصرية و التفرقة بين النّاس : لا فرق لعربي على أعجمي و لا لأبيض على أسود إلّا بالتّقوى ..اي أن ميزان الإنسان عمله الصًالح لااااا غير

  • @andrewberrocal2281
    @andrewberrocal2281 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Whatever it takes to survive this vile land of hypocrisy and sin

  • @susannahhunt100
    @susannahhunt100 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Excellent documentary thank you.

  • @agneshouessou9765
    @agneshouessou9765 วันที่ผ่านมา

    🙂Many moons back, during my first year at an all-girls, Catholic boarding secondary school in darkest Africa, there was a beautiful fragile-looking white girl. She had to cut grass with the rest of us junior girls on labour days. That was certainly new to me, but somehow, her palms blistered terribly! Only a few senior girls would take pity on her and let her sit it out in the shade. I longed to be friends with her, but I was too shy.😊 It wasn't till the second year when my fun-loving big sister transfered to our school that we all got to know her. She was black! 😁 (She always said she was, but no one believed her, till we met her dad.)🌹✝️

    • @Chamis-dt4wc
      @Chamis-dt4wc 10 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Was she an albino?

  • @LadyAngela678
    @LadyAngela678 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    Some people wanted to sit at the table with the devil. Thats on them.

  • @leewhitaker538
    @leewhitaker538 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    ~ 11:48 Ariana Grande is Italian.

    • @deniseberman8633
      @deniseberman8633 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Italy is across the water from Africa!😄

    • @leewhitaker538
      @leewhitaker538 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@deniseberman8633 ~ North Africa, not sub Saharan Africa.

  • @leescales5216
    @leescales5216 19 วันที่ผ่านมา

    My mom and her siblings were the first generation on that side of the family that couldn't pass. They told me about how their grandfather would put his hat on when his hair got long, so people could see it was curly, so that he could get the better paying daywork, since he could pass.
    Sadly, my grandmother had to endure slurs in public when she had my mom and her siblings with her, since people assumed she was a white woman who had slept with a black man.

  • @1goldbaby
    @1goldbaby 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    So sad that so many today thinking being bi racial is something new.

  • @pierrerochon7271
    @pierrerochon7271 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I SOMETIMES PASS FOR WHITE AND anything else - as the situation calls for-- I do it to feed my extended family- I have blond hair and blue eyes- my family marched on Selma, Washington, and was run out of Louisiana
    I have put my life on the line as a teenager and a college student several times- been to jail for it- several times I have dedicated my life to Civil and human. My Grandfather was lynched by the KKK and left him hanging for 2 days. I am a liberal Democrat - not a black trump republican - who is married to a Karen- like - Clarence Thomas - HMMMM. I Really- do not care what anyone thinks about me-

  • @JubeiKibagamiFez
    @JubeiKibagamiFez 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    0:59 This was a good movie.

  • @susanlett9632
    @susanlett9632 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I'm a very light skinned woman of color and my birth certificate says negro on it. My parents are not as light as me but they're pretty light. Any of us could easily pass for white but I've never tried to and neither have my parents but I'm sure they would have it in a dangerous situation

  • @almariekuit56
    @almariekuit56 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It happened in South Africa all the time during Apartheid. Very sad. 😢

  • @MamaOdie
    @MamaOdie 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I am half Mexican, and I remember hearing how native american people would sometimes pass as Mexican. Where my great grandmother was from was Apache reservation. Back then, there literally was a price on their heads. A childs scalp was not worth as much an adult, but money is money.

  • @pm2886
    @pm2886 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It's incredibly important to point out that the man who wore a turban and was got more respect because people thought he was Indian, proves the point that it's not about colour.

  • @paulines581
    @paulines581 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Terminologies, are different across the globe. Maybe white identifying of African or black (could be anything here) descent. Some wouldn't say coloured that's a whole different group as accountability is different.