Editorial: Is it Possible For You To Retain Your Racial Identity While Receiving A Formal Education?

 
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Racial Identity

By: Lauryn Bass

Is it possible for you to retain your racial identity while receiving a formal education? The fact that this question has been posed as a discussion is quite humorous. As you go through the regular K-12 school system, you learn and grow with what you experience in and outside of the home and classroom. You are shaped by so many things, but this does not take away from who you are as a person.

Consider the phrase, "It takes a village to raise a child." It is impossible for someone to be shaped into an efficient communicator without being exposed to the outside world of their community. Yet, you retain what makes you happy, what you understand to be true and morph into who you are supposed to be. 

But let's go back to the question at hand: Can you be you, with outside forces at hand? Well to introduce myself, I am a black woman from Georgia attending Hampton University. Sure, that can be attached to a little bit of information about me--but not who I am. I am me by how I walk, talk, and carry myself. My beliefs, thoughts, interests, are all mine and can't be compared to anyone else.

Where my influence stems from can come from my parents, friends, religion, what I've perceived, or even innovated from what I've gained from my studies. People are not supposed to be one set thing. We are allowed to change our minds, make mistakes, and expand. So to believe that you may lose or gain any part of yourself by attending a secondary education system is quite absurd. In all honesty, it is based on insecurity. 

I understand the argument that many around me know as "code-switching". This is when you change to fit into the atmosphere around you. As a minority, for us to even take a step to be in the doors with the big boys, we have to change to fit a Eurocentric standard. For example, lessening our use of slang, straightening our hair, cutting our locs, ridding ourselves of our accents, shielding our cultural prints, you name it. Anything to conform to our brethren and sistren who aren't exactly like us culturally. But that shouldn't matter. But it is the way of the world where white-privilege has to continually be pushed to the limit so that we can demand change and be who we are.

Currently, we had to pass the Crown Act of 2020 just so that we won't be judge by our physical but by the hard work we do and the content of our character in the workplace. This just shows how far we have come but also how behind we were in terms of equality. It is a sad truth, but much like the thought that you can't be who you are and also strive to be smarter and wiser just doesn't sit well in my spirit because it is just not true.

As we age, we definitely lose parts of us that were keeping us stagnant. We also cherish the memories that brought us to where we stand in the present. Education is just like that. I don't know about most but unless you have a photographic memory, you do not retain ALL that you are taught in college. You soak up as much as you can and use what is beneficial to you. You keep what you need.

As far as my culture, I keep what I need. There are things that are cultural that we can also grow from to be better. Traditions aren't always the best and you have the ability to create new ones. As you learn, you take back what helped you to your families and communities so that we can become better and better as time passes. We learn more about government, financial literacy, anything to progress and keep history from repeating.

Think of the doctors who tested gained more knowledge from testing and creating vaccines for smallpox. They are no less the person they were before and after totally eradicating the disease. They then shared their discovery with the world and made life a little less hard. I know that the biggest disagreement that Frank possibly had with Obama was his grammar. It is known for illiteracy to be a common cultural difference in the Black community but look at our history; are you surprised?

As you dive deeper into ebonics, you find that English is very complex. New words are created every day, much of our language comes from another--it is very telling about your roots how you speak. But whether or not your proficiency level is eloquent or full of idiosyncrasies, does not define who you are. At the end of the day, you're just communicating. The way you speak is a personal choice. You decide who you are and who you want to be.

In conclusion, the education you obtain does not define who you are but just adds to the qualities you have to offer. It adds to your story, your walk, your journey. It is possible to bring what you've learned from every place you've been with you in bits and pieces. You are a collage full of color, ridges, dips, and glued pieces. Life is not simply black or white. It's grey. You will not be like your parents but a mix. Your siblings will reflect who you are. Your friends will shape who you are. Ultimately, you will turn out to be the best you and there should be no shame in that. Do what helps others and makes you happy, and do not worry about if you'll lose who you were or are. You won't.


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