Jump to content
Angel7422

What race are Egyptians considered to be here

 Share

21 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Filed: Other Country: Israel
Timeline
http://www.indiana.edu/~affirm/race.shtml

Above is a link to the legal definition of racial groups. Being Black/African American does not have anything to do with simply being born in Africa. There are plenty of White people aka: Caucasians, living in South Africa for hundreds of years but they are not "black". It's about skin color, type of hair, facial features, etc. "Negroid" features to use an old fashioned term. The majority of people in Egypt do not fit into this category, regardless of the geographical locations of Egypt.

On the other hand a person with "negroid" (dark brown) skin, "negroid" facial features and hair, born in London would not be Caucasian simply because they were born in Europe.

The 20th Century terms for categorizing race are: Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Congoid, Capoid, Australoid, and included in the group "Cacasoid" are people of Europe, Central Asia, South Asia, Middle East, and North and Northeast Africa.

Race has nothing to do with where you are born or what passport you carry. Race predates the artifical boundaries created by governments and the naming of geographic regions.

Nubians are an ancient group of people still very genetically "intact" due to a high rate of intermarriage. If my ex had been born in Sudan where the largest concentration of people of Nubian descent still live he likely would have been told to put "black", but the Egyptian passport made it confusing to the ignorant govenment employee he was dealing with. When the Aswan Dam was built many Egyptian Nubians faced a "diaspora" when they lost their homes and ancestral lands to the resulting "lake" above the dam. It's a very sad story of the forced migration of an ancient people.

Karamella

Wow! That explanation is definitely from the 1950s and 60s. Arabs aren't even a homogeneous group; we are Arabs based primarily on language and cultural aspects, so how can all or even most of us be classified as White? We can't. "White Arabs" in the US were predominately Christian Arabs. Muslim Arabs have had a more mixed racial reception in the US. We have been the "Other" for a long time.

Race is, at best, a nebulous concept. I grew up in a time of overt racial discrimination when the paper bag test (was your skin darker than a paper bag?) was used to determine if you were "too back office appearance" to hire, and the "one drop (of Negro Blood) rule" forced many people to sever ties with their communities inorder to "pass" for white and have opportunities not afforded where they were known as Black or Colored. There were ( and still are) places in the US where signs saying "No Indians or Dogs allowed" are openly displayed. Your explanation brought back memories of those times and places.

Being African American or White is not simply about physical features. There are many, many people classified as Asian who have dark skin, curly hair, so-called "Negroid" features who are not African at all. Many Upper Egytians fit that description, but they certainly aren't AA, nor Caucasian. There are "Whites" who don't "look White" and "non-Whites" who do. In a diverse country, such as the US, saying that someone "Looks American" is synonymous to saying they "look white" to many who give that expression not one thought.

There is no "legal" definition of racial groups; the affirmative action guidelines are political, not legal, and the history of racism in the US and colonial states has much to do with it. I've lived long enough to witness these classifications morph multiple times due to social perceptions. Racial classifications from any century have been socio-political, not biological nor physiological. They are merely social constructs that change over time. I've always been Arab, but I haven't always been White because I'm not a Christian Arab. I became White as times and politics changed. I am also becoming non-White again. It's wishful thinking to believe that what you check on a form forms the perceptions of others toward you.

For more information on how social politics defines race, here are some books that discuss the issue:

Race and Arab Americans Before and After 9/11: From Invisible Citizens to Visible Subjects

Not Quite American?: The Shaping of Arab and Muslim Identity in the United States

How the Irish Became White

Working Toward Whiteness

Whiteness of a Different Color: European Immigrants and the Alchemy of Race

Anti-Arab Racism in the USA: Where it Comes From and What it Means for Politics Today

When She Was White: The True Story of a Family Divided By Race

I hope that helps.

Edited by Virtual wife
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Other Country: Israel
Timeline
Yah that makes sense ... alot of things are about Politics. I didnt know that he didnt have to put White... So, from now on is it a good idea to keep checking white for Adam bcz hes done so at least 5 times? Or is it Ok to check off as he wishes... I dont feel like he should be made to take on White identity if he doesnt want to.
The designations are political, nothing more. The State Department has agreements with several countries that their immigrants will be considered to be "White", despite their true ethnic background. It has to do with the "privilege" and "desirability" of being "White" and a colonial mindset. Egyptians, in particular, Middle Easterners North Africans as a group are not Caucasians; many of us would not be perceved as White in the US at all. As a person of ME origin, I don't consider myself to be White, would never check that from a list, and I'm not the only one who feels that way. Choose what you like. It's not illegal.

Adam doesnt have to check White if he doesnt want to.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Ghana
Timeline
http://www.indiana.edu/~affirm/race.shtml

Above is a link to the legal definition of racial groups. Being Black/African American does not have anything to do with simply being born in Africa. There are plenty of White people aka: Caucasians, living in South Africa for hundreds of years but they are not "black". It's about skin color, type of hair, facial features, etc. "Negroid" features to use an old fashioned term. The majority of people in Egypt do not fit into this category, regardless of the geographical locations of Egypt.

On the other hand a person with "negroid" (dark brown) skin, "negroid" facial features and hair, born in London would not be Caucasian simply because they were born in Europe.

The 20th Century terms for categorizing race are: Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Congoid, Capoid, Australoid, and included in the group "Cacasoid" are people of Europe, Central Asia, South Asia, Middle East, and North and Northeast Africa.

Race has nothing to do with where you are born or what passport you carry. Race predates the artifical boundaries created by governments and the naming of geographic regions.

Nubians are an ancient group of people still very genetically "intact" due to a high rate of intermarriage. If my ex had been born in Sudan where the largest concentration of people of Nubian descent still live he likely would have been told to put "black", but the Egyptian passport made it confusing to the ignorant govenment employee he was dealing with. When the Aswan Dam was built many Egyptian Nubians faced a "diaspora" when they lost their homes and ancestral lands to the resulting "lake" above the dam. It's a very sad story of the forced migration of an ancient people.

Karamella

negroid is not only old fashioned but totally not PC

OTxq.jpgAsante Maroon
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Ghana
Timeline
http://www.indiana.edu/~affirm/race.shtml

Above is a link to the legal definition of racial groups. Being Black/African American does not have anything to do with simply being born in Africa. There are plenty of White people aka: Caucasians, living in South Africa for hundreds of years but they are not "black". It's about skin color, type of hair, facial features, etc. "Negroid" features to use an old fashioned term. The majority of people in Egypt do not fit into this category, regardless of the geographical locations of Egypt.

On the other hand a person with "negroid" (dark brown) skin, "negroid" facial features and hair, born in London would not be Caucasian simply because they were born in Europe.

The 20th Century terms for categorizing race are: Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Congoid, Capoid, Australoid, and included in the group "Cacasoid" are people of Europe, Central Asia, South Asia, Middle East, and North and Northeast Africa.

Race has nothing to do with where you are born or what passport you carry. Race predates the artifical boundaries created by governments and the naming of geographic regions.

Nubians are an ancient group of people still very genetically "intact" due to a high rate of intermarriage. If my ex had been born in Sudan where the largest concentration of people of Nubian descent still live he likely would have been told to put "black", but the Egyptian passport made it confusing to the ignorant govenment employee he was dealing with. When the Aswan Dam was built many Egyptian Nubians faced a "diaspora" when they lost their homes and ancestral lands to the resulting "lake" above the dam. It's a very sad story of the forced migration of an ancient people.

Karamella

Wow! That explanation is definitely from the 1950s and 60s. Arabs aren't even a homogeneous group; we are Arabs based primarily on language and cultural aspects, so how can all or even most of us be classified as White? We can't. "White Arabs" in the US were predominately Christian Arabs. Muslim Arabs have had a more mixed racial reception in the US. We have been the "Other" for a long time.

Race is, at best, a nebulous concept. I grew up in a time of overt racial discrimination when the paper bag test (was your skin darker than a paper bag?) was used to determine if you were "too back office appearance" to hire, and the "one drop (of Negro Blood) rule" forced many people to sever ties with their communities inorder to "pass" for white and have opportunities not afforded where they were known as Black or Colored. There were ( and still are) places in the US where signs saying "No Indians or Dogs allowed" are openly displayed. Your explanation brought back memories of those times and places.

Being African American or White is not simply about physical features. There are many, many people classified as Asian who have dark skin, curly hair, so-called "Negroid" features who are not African at all. Many Upper Egytians fit that description, but they certainly aren't AA, nor Caucasian. There are "Whites" who don't "look White" and "non-Whites" who do. In a diverse country, such as the US, saying that someone "Looks American" is synonymous to saying they "look white" to many who give that expression not one thought.

There is no "legal" definition of racial groups; the affirmative action guidelines are political, not legal, and the history of racism in the US and colonial states has much to do with it. I've lived long enough to witness these classifications morph multiple times due to social perceptions. Racial classifications from any century have been socio-political, not biological nor physiological. They are merely social constructs that change over time. I've always been Arab, but I haven't always been White because I'm not a Christian Arab. I became White as times and politics changed. I am also becoming non-White again. It's wishful thinking to believe that what you check on a form forms the perceptions of others toward you.

For more information on how social politics defines race, here are some books that discuss the issue:

Race and Arab Americans Before and After 9/11: From Invisible Citizens to Visible Subjects

Not Quite American?: The Shaping of Arab and Muslim Identity in the United States

How the Irish Became White

Working Toward Whiteness

Whiteness of a Different Color: European Immigrants and the Alchemy of Race

Anti-Arab Racism in the USA: Where it Comes From and What it Means for Politics Today

When She Was White: The True Story of a Family Divided By Race

I hope that helps.

:thumbs:

I agree...Depends on who you ask.

Definitions of race are pretty biased. When you are a person of color, especially, you definitely are not left with a true and accurate choice.

Edited by Asante Maroon
OTxq.jpgAsante Maroon
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Jordan
Timeline
In a diverse country, such as the US, saying that someone "Looks American" is synonymous to saying they "look white" to many who give that expression not one thought.

Race isn't a biological thing anyway as there is more genetic diversity and variation-- even phenotypical-- within a race than between races. It's a social construct which is where we become confused, I believe, because society changes its mind about things. Prior to the banning of the import of slaves, race was fluid. If you could either pass for another race or if you had the right conenctions... you could switch races. Say your father was a rich plantation owner (like Thomas Jefferson) and your mother was a slave (Sally Hemmings)... not all of their children went on to be considered "African American". Some changed their race to white. This wasn't something uncommon. BUT! Once slave trade was banned we switched to an inherited race of the "least desirable" race to maintain populations. So in this same example, if trade had been banned when the children born, they would have been AA forever. This is part of that question-- why is it when a white person and a black person have a child, the child is identified as black and never white? because genetically, it's a 50-50 and should have equal chance... also think about it-- it applies to any white+other race, or other+other in a social heirarchy. Will a half asian half white child be seen as white more often than asian?

i quoted VW's above because that is a point of frustration for me. I've noticed that I've head this phrase in the negative from people overseas, my husband, people down here... and yes... it refers to then not being white usually. I remember my husband saying to me "so and so doesn't look American" or saying that about people he sees in our neighborhood (who are primarily hispanic). Now, I know he doesn't mean anything bad about it.. but... I remember snapping once at him "you can't say who is and who isn't American by their looks." I am not sure if he is getting that more now or not... maybe he is or maybe he isn't. Sometime, i hope to take him to AZ to visit my aunt and uncle. My Aunt's parents came from Beijing and she was born here, and she is 100% American. I know it always throws him for a loop to hear an American accent from someone who "doesn't look American" (which American to him, I've decided, is either white or black, he associates it with both but never asian or hispanic).

I do know that in speaking with him I've learned they basically know very little to nothing about our racial and ethnic histories, so I do try to educate him on that if it comes up. We watched a show on the end of slavery in the US and the transition to sharecropping. He got the agricultural restrictions on "40 acres and a mule" pretty quick as he knows farming pretty well... but some of the social experiences he was totally in the dark about. I think it helped him understand some of the situation today. he was pretty shocked (and I could tell he didn't really grasp) the civil rights era and prior struggles of people... and it was strange to him that groups considered "white" today and that seemed obviously "white" to him, such as Italians or Irish or Jewish peoples had problems with not being considered "white" at various times. Heck, no way any of us really grasp what it was really, really like for every group of people and every person over history... but if we can move towards understanding and empathy, maybe it can help us from repeating similar mistakes in the future.

None of my posts have ever been helpful. Be forewarned.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: Other Country: Israel
Timeline

i quoted VW's above because that is a point of frustration for me. I've noticed that I've head this phrase in the negative from people overseas, my husband, people down here... and yes... it refers to then not being white usually. I remember my husband saying to me "so and so doesn't look American" or saying that about people he sees in our neighborhood (who are primarily hispanic). Now, I know he doesn't mean anything bad about it.. but... I remember snapping once at him "you can't say who is and who isn't American by their looks."

That "American" is synonymous with "White" for so many is a big bone of contention for me, too, julianna, which is why I mentioned it. I'm incredulous every time I hear it, no matter how many times I hear it or who I hear it from. I've heard parents of half MENA, half American offspring refer proudly to their kids as "looking more American than Arab" without being able to grasp the incongruity of the comment. Even when I travel in MENA with a USA passport, it is more often than not that customs officers or other officials upon checking my ID remark how I either can't be American because I "look too Arab" or can't be Muslim and American, too. I'm not sure how this paradigm still manages to exist in the age of inter-racial and international mixing, mass communication and easy travel, but it does.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...