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This is an intersting debate. I am not an American, but if I were a citizen, I'd most 
probably describe myself as a Ugandan-American.
 
When one studies Hispanics, similar differences emerge, e.g. Mexican-American, 
Cuban-American, Puerto Rican, Chicano, etc.  While many speak the the same language, 
Spanish, cultural differences are obvious, perhaps even to a casual observer.  
 
A curious factoid may be used to highlight the above: among illicit-drug users of 
Hispanic orgin, there are significant differences in type of drugs used according to 
national origin.
 
Similar differences in drug-choice have been documented between African-American and 
American Caucasian drug users.
 
Anyhow, sociologists and/or cultural antrhropologists may be in position to elaborate 
and characterize the differences among Continental Africans and African Americans.
 
Of course there are differences among Continental Africans ourselves that we know only 
too well -- extending  even to lifestyle here in USA.

Musamize

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'African-American' Becomes a Term for Debate

August 29, 2004
 By RACHEL L. SWARNS 



 

SILVER SPRING, Md., Aug. 27 - For a moment, the
Ethiopian-born activist seemed to melt into the crowd,
blending into the sea of black professors, health experts
and community leaders considering how to educate blacks
about the dangers of prostate cancer. But when he piped up
to suggest focusing some attention on African immigrants,
the dividing lines were promptly and pointedly drawn. 

The focus of the campaign, the activist, Abdulaziz Kamus,
was told, would be strictly on African-Americans. 

"I said, 'But I am African and I am an American citizen; am
I not African-American?' " said Mr. Kamus, who is an
advocate for African immigrants here, recalling his sense
of bewilderment. "They said 'No, no, no, not you.' " 

"The census is claiming me as an African-American," said
Mr. Kamus, 47, who has lived in this country for 20 years.
"If I walk down the streets, white people see me as an
African-American. Yet African-Americans are saying, 'You
are not one of us.' So I ask myself, in this country, how
do I define myself?" 

That prickly question is increasingly being raised as the
growing number of foreign-born blacks in this Washington
suburb and elsewhere inspires a quiet debate over who can
claim the term "African-American," which has rapidly
replaced "black" in much of the nation's political and
cultural discourse. 

In the 1990's, the number of blacks with recent roots in
sub-Saharan Africa nearly tripled while the number of
blacks with origins in the Caribbean grew by more than 60
percent, according to demographers at the State University
of New York at Albany. By 2000, foreign-born blacks
constituted 30 percent of the blacks in New York City, 28
percent of the blacks in Boston and about a quarter here in
Montgomery County, Md., an analysis of census data
conducted at Queens College shows. 

In recent years, black immigrants and their children have
become more visible in universities, the workplace and in
politics, with Colin L. Powell, the son of Jamaican
immigrants, serving as secretary of state, and Barack
Obama, born to a Kenyan father and an American mother,
leading the polls in the race for a United States Senate
seat in Illinois and emerging as a rising star in the
Democratic Party. 

The demographic shifts, which gained strength in the 1960's
after changes in federal immigration law led to increased
migration from Africa and Latin America, have been
accompanied in some places by fears that newcomers might
eclipse native-born blacks. And they have touched off
delicate musings about ethnic labels, identity and the
often unspoken differences among people who share the same
skin color. 

This month, the debate spilled into public view when Alan
Keyes, the black Republican challenger for the Senate seat
in Illinois, questioned whether Mr. Obama, the keynote
speaker at the Democratic National Convention, should claim
an African-American identity. 

"Barack Obama claims an African-American heritage," Mr.
Keyes said on the ABC program "This Week" with George
Stephanopoulos. "Barack Obama and I have the same race -
that is, physical characteristics. We are not from the same
heritage." 

"My ancestors toiled in slavery in this country," Mr. Keyes
said. "My consciousness, who I am as a person, has been
shaped by my struggle, deeply emotional and deeply painful,
with the reality of that heritage." 

Some black Americans argue that black immigrants, like Mr.
Kamus, and the children of immigrants, like Mr. Obama and
Mr. Powell, are most certainly African-American. (Mr. Obama
and Mr. Powell often use that term when describing
themselves.) Yet some immigrants and their children prefer
to be called African or Nigerian-American or
Jamaican-American, depending on their countries of origin.
Other people prefer the term black, which seems to include
everyone, regardless of nationality. 

Mr. Keyes's comments reflect the views of a number of black
Americans, including those who challenged Mr. Kamus at the
meeting on prostate cancer earlier this year. Many argued
that the term African-American should refer to the
descendents of slaves brought to the United States
centuries ago, not to newcomers who have not inherited the
legacy of bondage, segregation and legal discrimination. 

Bobby Austin, an administrator at the University of the
District of Columbia who attended the meeting in
Washington, said he understood why some blacks were
offended when Mr. Kamus claimed an African-American
identity. Dr. Austin said some people feared that black
immigrants and their children would snatch up the hard-won
opportunities made possible by the civil rights movement. 

Several studies suggest that black immigrants and their
children are already achieving at higher levels than
native-born blacks. A study based on 2000 census data
conducted by John R. Logan and Glenn Deane at SUNY Albany
found that African immigrants typically had more education
and higher median incomes than did native-born blacks. 

And earlier this year, officials at Harvard pointed out
that the majority of their black students - perhaps as many
two-thirds - were African and Caribbean immigrants or their
children, or to a lesser extent, children of biracial
couples. Sociologists say foreign-born blacks from
majority-black countries are less psychologically
handicapped by the stigma of race. Many arrive with higher
levels of education and professional experience. And
sociologists say they often encounter less discrimination. 

"We've suffered so much that we're a bit weary and
immigration seems like one more hurdle we will have to
climb," said Dr. Austin, 59, who traces his ancestors back
to slavery. "People are asking: 'Will I have to climb over
these immigrants to get to my dream? Will my children have
to climb?' 

"These are very aggressive people who are coming here,"
said Dr. Austin, who is calling for a frank dialogue
between native-born and foreign-born blacks. "I don't
berate immigrants for that; they have given up a lot to get
here. But we're going to be in competition with them. We
have to be honest about it. That is one of the dividing
lines." 

Mr. Obama says such arguments do not reflect the views of
black Americans who have joined forces over the years with
Africans and people from the Caribbean to fight colonialism
and poverty. He says black descendants of slaves share more
similarities than differences with black immigrants and
their children. He says his grandfather worked as a servant
in Kenya and was described as a "house boy" by whites even
when he was a middle-aged man. 

"Some of the patterns of struggle and degradation that
blacks here in the United States experienced aren't that
different from the colonial experience in the Caribbean or
the African continent," Mr. Obama said in an interview. 

"For me the term African-American really does fit," said
Mr. Obama, 43. "I'm African, I trace half of my heritage to
Africa directly and I'm American." 

Shifting ethnic labels have long inspired fierce debates
and discussions among blacks in this country, reflecting
changes in socioeconomic circumstances, political
strategies and evolving views of identity since Africans
were first brought here as slaves. 

The term "African" was used sporadically during the 17th
and 18th centuries, said Michael Thornton, a professor of
Afro-American studies at the University of Wisconsin who
has studied the issue. In the 1800's, "colored" started
gaining popularity because it was viewed as more inclusive,
referring to those of mixed-race as well as full African
heritage, Mr. Thornton found. 

Often several terms were in use simultaneously. In the 1890
census, for instance, blacks were asked to choose among
four ethnic labels: black, mulatto, quadroon and octoroon,
depending upon the degree of white blood in their ancestry.


And in the 20th century, many black Americans shifted from
colored to Negro to black and, most recently, to
African-American, sometimes within one generation. 

"I've had to check several different boxes in my lifetime,"
said Donna Brazile, 44, Al Gore's campaign manager in the
2000 presidential race. "In my birth certificate I'm
identified as a Negro. Then I was black. Now I readily
check African-American. I have a group of friends and we
call ourselves the colored girls sometimes, to remind
ourselves that we ain't too far from that, either." 

The term African-American has crept steadily into the
nation's vocabulary since 1988, when the Rev. Jesse Jackson
held a news conference to urge Americans to use it to refer
to blacks. 

"It puts us in our proper historical context," Mr. Jackson
said then, adding in a recent interview that he still
favored the term. "Every ethnic group in this country has a
reference to some land base, some historical cultural base.
African-Americans have hit that level of cultural
maturity." 

Since 1989, the number of blacks using the term has
steadily increased, polls show. In a survey that year
conducted by ABC and The Washington Post, 66 percent said
they preferred the term black, 22 preferred
African-American, 10 percent liked both terms and 2 percent
had no opinion. 

In 2000, the Census Bureau for the first time allowed
respondents to check a box that carried the heading
African-American next to the term black. In 2003, a poll by
the same news organizations found that 48 percent of blacks
preferred the term African-American, 35 percent favored
black and 17 percent liked both terms. 

The term has become such a fixture in the political lexicon
that many white politicians, including President Bush and
Senator John Kerry, his Democratic rival, favor it in their
political speeches these days. In fact, Mr. Kerry's wife,
Teresa Heinz Kerry, who is white, has referred to herself
on occasion as an African-American. She was born to
Portuguese parents in Mozambique. 

Many whites use the term for all blacks. But among blacks
there is much less agreement, particularly in places like
Silver Spring where Africans, Haitians and Dominicans
mingle in the town's coffee shops, nightclubs and beauty
salons, or in neighboring Washington, where the City
Council voted this year to include the Ethiopian language
Amharic as an official language to accommodate the growing
Ethiopian community. 

Even adherents of African-American acknowledge that
shifting demographics have made the term's meaning more
ambiguous. 

"It's a comfortable term for me personally and for people
like me who are of African descent and have been in this
nation for a long time," said Michael Lomax, the president
of the United Negro College Fund, which raises money for 38
historically black colleges. "But it gets more confusing
when you recognize that this nation is full of all kinds of
people of African descent." 

"It's a much richer and more complex variety than when we
started asserting that we were African-American," said Mr.
Lomax, who argues that recent black immigrants from the
Caribbean and elsewhere should feel free to use the term. 

Foreign-born blacks are also divided. Angelique Shofar, the
Liberian-born host of a weekly radio program in Washington
called "Africa Meets Africa," prefers to call herself an
African, even though she has lived in the United States for
28 of her 39 years. 

Phillip J. Brutus, the first Haitian-born state legislator
in Florida, favors the term black because it includes
foreign-born immigrants and black Americans. Mr. Brutus
lives in Miami, where more than a third of the blacks are
foreign born. 

"African-American has become the politically correct term
to use, but I still say black," Mr. Brutus said. "I say I'm
black and American. That's what's most accurate. I think,
by and large, black is more encompassing." 

Here in Silver Spring, Mr. Kamus is still searching for the
right label. He says he would like to be described simply
as a universal man, but he knows that the United States,
like many countries, has a long history of categorizing its
people. And he would like to find a way of stitching his
twin identities - one Ethiopian, one American - into a
whole. 

With that in mind, Mr. Kamus and some of his Ethiopian-born
friends plan to sit down next month with Dr. Austin and Dr.
Austin's American-born friends over a meal of savory meats
and Ethiopian bread. They want to start a dialogue about
their similarities, their differences and issues of
identity at a time of demographic change. 

"We are in a critical stage of defining ourselves, who we
are as Americans," Mr. Kamus said of African immigrants and
their children here. "But one thing is clear. We are here
and we are not going home. This is our home now. That is
the reality." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/29/national/29african.html?ex=1094911096&ei=1&en=59027e365692ed73


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