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Reload this Page Racism Against Black Dominicans Has Become Epidemic

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Racism Against Black Dominicans Has Become Epidemic
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Default Racism Against Black Dominicans Has Become Epidemic - 11-08-07, 04:42 PM

THE DR'S DARK SECRET
RACISM AGAINST BLACK DOMINICANS HAS BECOME EPIDEMIC ON
THE ISLAND

By JULIO TAVAREZ

August 8, 2007 -- When I read last week about the U.S.
Embassy in the Dominican Republic censuring Loft, a
nightclub in the Naco neighborhood of Santo Domingo,
because of the club's policy of discrimination against
black patrons and employees, it brought back sour
memories of a recent trip I took to the island.

Dominicans are known the world over for our great
baseball players, our beautiful beaches and our
friendly people.

But there is something of a dirty secret that we sweep
under the drug. Racism against black Dominicans, rich
or poor, happens everyday, and not just in clubs.

On my vacation, some friends I decided to check out a
nightspot called Tribeca, in Santiago. Apparently, it
was the hot spot. When we arrived, there was no line.
As we waited, people began lining up behind us. Slowly
they were allowed in. We weren't. I asked a bouncer
why and he said one of the owners instructed him not
to let us in.

Puzzled, I checked our attire. We were dressed
similarly to people being let in, so it wasn't what we
were wearing. We weren't driving a Mercedes, but we
weren't rolling in a Hyundai, either - we had a decent
ride.

Then, it dawned on me. It wasn't our clothes or our
car. The only difference between the people that were
given passage and us was they were light-skinned with
European features while we were dark-skinned with
African features. We were the wrong color.

When I told my friend, he just said, "That's how they
are here, let's go somewhere else."

I was shocked. I had heard stories of people not being
allowed into certain places in the DR because of their
complexion, but it had never happened to me.

I had heard the myth of the black Dominican baseball
player who wasn't allowed in a club, bought the place
and fired everybody. Stories like these are rampant,
and seem like urban legends.

But this was no legend.

Acts of racism are commonplace in the Dominican
Republic. Dark-skinned Dominicans have been told where
they belong, and it seems have accepted it.

Immediately, I began paying attention, as I do here in
the United States, to billboards, television
commercials and programs. Billboard after billboard
featured not one dark face. In television commercials
and programs, dark Dominicans were barely present and
most of the time weren't even shown at all.

It was as if we didn't even exist. In a country where
more than 80 percent of the population is mixed with
an African descendant, one would expect that at least
some mixed-race actors would be used in commercials,
but they don't make the cut, either.

The unrelenting oppression of African culture and the
discrimination against those that are, either partly
or fully, descendants of the African people, continue
to pull our country deeper into depths of poverty,
ignorance and despair.

Racism is nothing new in Latin America. The question
is what are we doing about it? Tego Calderón, in a
Tempo column last year, wrote that we needed a civil
rights movement for Latino blacks.

I agree. We no longer can continue to sweep this dirty
secret under the rug.

Julio Tavarez is the director of the Passaic County
Chapter of the Latino Leadership Alliance of New
Jersey

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"Everything is Dual; everything has poles; everything has its pair of opposites; like and unlike are the same; opposites are identical in nature, but different in degree; extremes meet; all truths are but half-truths; all paradoxes may be reconciled."-- North African Wisdom
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Default 11-08-07, 05:08 PM

I was reading an article about this same subject earlier this week and couldn't believe what I was reading.


I'm back and ready to attack.
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Default 11-08-07, 06:15 PM

Some people in the carib allow themselves to be mistreated. Certain places I wouldn't go because of it. Heard Barbados is the worst, like they're still shoe shining.


"Everything is Dual; everything has poles; everything has its pair of opposites; like and unlike are the same; opposites are identical in nature, but different in degree; extremes meet; all truths are but half-truths; all paradoxes may be reconciled."-- North African Wisdom

Last edited by Black Lion; 11-08-07 at 06:19 PM.
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Default 12-08-07, 10:28 PM

I hear there are black Dominicans who don't call themselves black and hate other blacks.
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Default 14-08-07, 11:04 AM

Quote:
Originally Posted by alabamagirl View Post
I hear there are black Dominicans who don't call themselves black and hate other blacks.
Theres no such thing as a Black Dominican. Black is not a ethnicity it's a color. There are Dominican's with African ancestry such as myself, but unlike me a good percentage would rather embrace the indian or Spaniard blood in them.
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Default 14-08-07, 02:05 PM

When channel surfing I sometimes pause at Spanish language stations because I am curious as to how they present themselves. At first I was amazed that all the people were White, with an occasional Black or mixed-race maid. Nowadays you will sometimes see a few of this type as audience on game and talk shows. So they are making progress of a sort.

As perhaps many of you may have experienced: when discussing racial issues with Spanish speaking Blacks, they often say, “I am not Black” I’m Dominican, Puerto Rican, whatever. So I am just so happy to hear the above, I can’t even tell you. Ignorance and stupidity like that should not be afforded the comfort of sympathy. If they are so worthless as to accept, and apparently even embrace, that sort of thing – F**k um.

Quote: Theres no such thing as a Black Dominican. Black is not a ethnicity it's a color. There are Dominican's with African ancestry such as myself, but unlike me a good percentage would rather embrace the indian or Spaniard blood in them.

Need I say more?

But for the record: this represents in confusion in meanings: Black IS an ethnicity, it is one of the main three: Black (the original), and it’s off-shoots: White and Mongol. Dominican is a “Nationality”. But that was probably already known; people grasp at anything in order to hold onto what they hold dear.
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Default 14-08-07, 08:38 PM

LOL@Jim! There were no Blacks on the slave ships. The people were African they became Black over years of lost identity. If you had the knowledge to know your exact nationality i doubt you'd be saying you're just black.
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Default 15-08-07, 02:52 AM

Quote:
Originally Posted by King Capo View Post
Theres no such thing as a Black Dominican. Black is not a ethnicity it's a color. There are Dominican's with African ancestry such as myself, but unlike me a good percentage would rather embrace the indian or Spaniard blood in them.
Black is race (i.e. negro)

Your race is black, the ethnicity/culture you adapted is dominican.

Last edited by impactplayer; 15-08-07 at 03:05 AM.
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