Black Palestinians shrug off racism
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip Hey, chocolate, Hey, cappuccino, Hey, Galaxy [brand of chocolate], Hey, brown one and Hey, black one, are jocular expressions used by some in Gaza when a man, woman or child of African descent passes by. Sometimes the racism is expressed nonverbally through looks. Gazans, however, seem unaware of this racism.
Al-Monitor met with political activist Samah al-Rawagh, 33, at her home and asked her whether she experienced any discrimination due to her skin color. She made light of the matter. Yet, when her father Ahmad al-Rawagh, 80, recounted incidents he had experienced involving racism, Samah was shocked. Thats the first time Ive heard such stories from you, she said.
I struggled a lot to overcome the difficulties caused by the color of my skin. I always had to doubly prove myself at school, at work and in life, because Im dark-skinned, Ahmad said.
He said that they are originally from Sudan. His ancestors came at the beginning of the 20th century and lived in Palestine in a village called Roubin, neighboring Jaffa until 1948, when they were forced to migrate to the Gaza Strip. "But I never felt that I did not belong here. Palestine is the homeland I have always known, and is a homeland to about 10,000 other dark-skinned people in the Gaza Strip."
Ahmad remembers when he was a teacher in the late 1950s, and one of his colleagues invited everyone, except him, to a wedding. That day, I felt embarrassed, and I decided that no one in my family would go through such an experience, he said.
Ahmad, who managed to complete his education, also participated in handball competitions abroad in the 1960s. I didnt want the color of my skin to be an obstacle for me or my children. I put them through private schools, so that they didn't hear anything that would offend them.
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