An article from ABC News about Black on Black disrimination:
Skin-Deep Discrimination
Updated 3:32 PM ET March 4, 2005
We all know about racism, about whites discriminating against blacks.
The prevelance of "colorism" -- black on black discrimination, is less
known, but it's an open secret in the black community.
Imagine this. You're asked to look at photos of faces and then give
them a score of 1 to 5 to rate how smart you think the people in the
photographs are. But there's a trick.
Mixed in with the 60
photos are pictures of the same person, but the photos are altered to
make the person look darker skinned. Will that affect whether someone
is rated smart? You bet.
There is still plenty of discrimination
by skin color in this world, and in test after test like this one, the
lighter-skinned people are perceived to be smarter, wealthier, even
happier. It may surprise you that among those who rated differently,
both whites and blacks give lower scores to people with darker skin. In
our test, on average, the lighter faces were rated smarter.
While many blacks do not discriminate against each other by color this
attitude is not unique. The fact that blacks often treat other blacks
differently, based on the shade of their skin, is an open secret in the
black community.
Comedian Paul Mooney talks about it on stage. In one of his
routines he said, "At home where I come from, Louisiana, we have the
saying for it: 'If you brown, hang around. If you yellow, you mellow.
If you white, you all right. If you black, get back.' "
Yet
Spike Lee was criticized for being so honest about colorism in his 1987
movie, "School Daze." In the film, light-skinned and dark-skinned girls
faced off and called each other names like "tar baby," "Barbie doll,"
"wannabe white" and "jigaboo."
Students Say They Grew Up With 'Colorism'
I spoke to University of Maryland students who say they've grown up with colorism.
"My mom said they used to always call me, um, chocolate baby," said
Shondra. "African-Americans went out of their way to make sure that I
knew that me being black was something that wasn't to be seen as
beautiful," said Ted.
"The worst insult a
dark-skinned boy as a child, ever got is to be called African," Jason
said. "You can call me anything in the book when I was younger. Just
don't call me African," he added.
Jason said people equate Africa to "savage."
Erica said one of her friends told her she was "pretty for a
dark-skinned girl." By contrast, some lighter-skinned blacks I spoke to
say colorism helped them.
"I guess I've benefited from the
colorism, because I'm light skinned, because I've always had the long,
straight hair," said Markita, another University of Maryland student.
"I thought I was just pretty."
'Blue Vein' Societies and the 'Paper Bag' Test
Historians say the friction between blacks of different shades began
during slavery because light-skinned blacks, often the children of
slaves and their white masters, got better treatment.
"They were the
ones who maybe worked in the house, as opposed to the darker-skinned
Africans who worked in the fields who were beaten more readily,"
explained historian Anthony Browder.
Lighter skin "began to be
associated with privilege and it became associated with beauty," said
Marita Golden, author of "Don't Play in the Sun: One Woman's Journey
Through the Color Complex."
After slavery, skin color continued to divide blacks. Light-skinned blacks formed exclusive clubs, Golden said.
"These groups of people were called Blue Vein societies, because in
order to quote "belong," the test of how light you were was could you
see your blue veins through your skin? And if they could, you were in,"
she said.
Some had to pass the "paper bag test" to get into
some churches, fraternities and nightclubs. "The paper bag would be
held against your skin. And if you were darker than the paper bag, you
weren't admitted," Golden said.
"Animosity had to grow out of
that unfair relationship. Darker-skinned blacks began to resent
light-skinned blacks who were given opportunities to succeed," Browder
said.
Hollywood, Music Videos Reinforce Bias
The Black Power movement was supposed to change those attitudes, and it
did change some things. Suddenly there were some dark-skinned male
stars who played the "hero" -- Richard Roundtree played "Shaft," and
other stars followed, like Samuel L. Jackson, Wesley Snipes, and Oscar
winners Denzel Washington and Jamie Foxx.
But the acceptance
of darker skin seems to apply mostly to the macho guys. The part of the
successful, educated black almost always goes to someone with lighter
skin.
Actor Mel Jackson says light-skinned men like him tend to get the role of the "business executive."
"If the character's supposed to be more successful or more, more
articulate or have a better background, they'll easily cast me in that
character," he said.
Actress Wendy Raquel Robinson has noticed
the difference. "I've never been offered, you know, the crackhead or
the distressed mother," she said. "I play the very upscale, educated
young lady," Robinson said. "I do have some peers that are a lot darker
than myself. They don't get the opportunities."
For a black
actress to become a leading lady, she'd better be light. Or maybe
Hispanic, like Eva Mendes, Will Smith's love interest in the current
hit, "Hitch." The light-skinned Mendes has played Denzel Washington's
wife in two films.
Colorism is especially prevalent in music videos. Kids we talked to on the street noticed that. And said they liked it.
"They all light skinned and they all look good," one boy said. "There's
a lot of dark-skinned girls that are pretty, with long hair, bad, but
they're not in the videos though, it's just the light-skinned ones
that's in the videos," another added.
"The darker the woman
takes on what I refer to as a "Ho" complex. She is the prostitute,"
said Karen a University of Maryland student. "The lighter a woman is,
well, she's the goddess. She's the untouchable. She is the woman that
all the men in the video aspire to have," she said.
Markita sees
it as a straightforward message: "If you want to be successful, this is
what you have to do. You have to become more white. You have to
assimilate yourself to the standard of beauty," she said.
Golden said we need to "face up to the fact that colorism is still very much with us."
It's one more thing to think about when we talk about a color-blind society.