Despite its history (ex. one drop rule) or original intention, the designation of "black" has always been a classification that included persons of African descent with multiple levels of black/African lineage. Always.
For those of us in the black community, especially those of us with knowledge of American history as it pertains to people of color, black is synonymous with multiracial (this includes those with immediate biracial parentage). This unspoken understanding has been present for generations. We didn't just adopt it when Barack Obama's parentage came to light or when interracial unions became more visible and acceptable within the past 20 or 30 years.
As the debate over Barack Obama's blackness continues, I am growing more and more troubled by the message it is sending, however unintentional: Black is unacceptable, especially if that "black" person is deemed by greater society as attractive, intelligent, accomplished, and/or having achieved the ultimate level of success - President of the United States of America.
Suddenly, when a black person does well outside of stereotypical or acceptable arenas (i.e. sports, music, etc), America scrambles to find a way to take away their blackness as a means of explaining why they are so exceptional! And when that black person comes from recent biracial parentage, it's even easier to excuse or erase that blackness, especially if society is already uncomfortable with it.
At this point, I don't know what the solution will be. Yes, we can create a biracial or multiracial category, but persons of mixed parentage must understand that a majority of America's black population can also check off that same box. Many of us are just as "mixed" as they are (and so is a significant segment of the "white" population - truth be told). And with the advancement of genealogical DNA tests, this fact (America's best kept secret) has become even easier to confirm.
Perhaps the rest of us blacks should finally start owning our biracial and multiracial heritage. By doing so, we would eliminate the argument altogether that Barack Obama is not one of us. I wonder how America and the "Obama's Not Black" advocates would feel then.













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