Latinx Files: The need to tackle colorism in our community
- Share via
Latinxs experience discrimination from other Latinxs at about the same rate as they do from non-Latinxs, according to the Pew Research Center.
In a report published Monday, the nonpartisan think tank found that 27% of Latinxs surveyed said they had âpersonally experienced discrimination or were treated unfairlyâ by other Latinxs. When asked about non-Latinxs, that number increased slightly to 31%.
For the record:
9:14 a.m. May 5, 2022An earlier version of this post said that a survey found Latinxs with darker skin faced prejudice from other Latinxs nearly twice as much (48%) as Latinxs with lighter skin (25%). The correct percentage for Latinxs with darker skin who faced prejudice is 41%.
The survey also found that Latinxs with darker skin faced prejudice from other Latinxs at a much higher rate (41%) as Latinxs with lighter skin (25%).
âHaving darker skin and being born outside the United States is associated with an increased chance of experiencing this type of discrimination,â writes Luis Noe-Bustamante, a Pew research analyst and author of the report.
I canât say Iâm shocked.
I could very easily point to the rise of white nationalism among people with Spanish surnames. I could also direct you to this New York Times story set in the Rio Grande Valley (puro 956 cuh!) about the grievance politics of âmy family did it the right wayâ Hispanics.
But if Iâm being real with you, I could also point to relatives who have casually used indigeneity or skin color as an insult. And I know Iâm not the only one.
According to the survey, nearly half of respondents (48%) said that they had heard family members and friends make racially insensitive comments or jokes about other Latinxs.
The Latinx experience chronicled
Get the Latinx Files newsletter for stories that capture the multitudes within our communities.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
That certainly was Matthew Luis Riveraâs experience. Rivera grew up in Humboldt Park, a historically Puerto Rican neighborhood in Chicago. The Windy City, he points out, is a very segregated place.
âThe way it was, there was us, there were the Blacks, the Mexicans, and the Polish â not even the whites.â
As a child Rivera was âconditioned to believe that Puerto Ricans and Mexicans were rivals.â
âI grew up hearing Mexican parents saying they didnât want their daughters to date Puerto Ricans, and Iâve heard people in my family say, âDonât date any Mexicans.ââ
That skin color plays a major role in determining how much discrimination Latinxs face isnât surprising, either. After all, colorism and racism are as much part of the culture as the food and music.
In a report published in November 2021, Pew researchers found that when given the option to self-identify using the Yadon-Ostfeld 10-point skin color scale, 80% of Latinxs chose a lighter skin tone.
This unspoken reality has led some to reject the concept of Latinidad altogether.
âI step over the margins Latinidad relegates me to and continue to forge in the fullness of my Blackness,â wrote Dash Harris Machado in a personal essay for Refinery29. âThat is where my pride lies.â
Itâs an uncomfortable truth to reckon with, especially given that Latinxs themselves are often racialized and subjected to bigotry. But Latinx is not a race. Neither is Mexican or Cuban or Salvadoran or Puerto Rican.
Rivera tells me that he grew up conflating ethnicity with race. It wasnât until he left the friendly confines of Humboldt Park to go to college in Indiana that he was forced to learn the distinction.
It was there where he was called the n-word at a Walmart. It was there where he was pulled over multiple times by police. It was there where he learned that the way he saw himself wasnât exactly how others saw him.
Rivera describes those experiences as being crucial in forcing him to think more critically about his racial identity. The way he sees himself now has evolved.
âI now say Iâm a Black Puerto Rican,â he says. âIâm Afro Latino and if anyone assumes Iâm just Black or just Latino, then Iâm going to be like, âNah. Actually, Iâm both. Iâm everything all at once.ââ
There is a tiny sliver of optimism to be found in the Pew report, and that is that younger Latinxs are more likely to say that theyâve witnessed a family member or friend make comments or jokes about other Latinxs and non-Latinxs alike than older Latinxs.
Granted, itâs not much, but Iâm choosing to see it as a sign that there is some inclination to recognize the problem.
And the sooner we recognize it, the sooner we can begin to address it.
Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times
Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Become a subscriber.
Democratic leadership backs anti-abortion incumbent
All hell broke loose on Monday after Politico reported that the Supreme Court was poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark case that legalized abortion at the federal level. You can find the Timesâ extensive coverage here.
Democrats have vowed to fight back, but as this New York Times analysis indicates, the party in control of the White House, House of Representatives and Senate has few viable options.
It also doesnât instill much confidence that the same party leaders decrying the potential ruling are also backing Henry Cuellar, the last anti-abortion Democrat in Congress, in an upcoming primary runoff against progressive Jessica Cisneros to represent Texasâ 13th congressional district.
Rep. Whip James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, the third-ranking Democrat in the House, was in San Antonio to stump for Cuellar on Wednesday.
âWhen people tell you you need to agree on everything, I do not agree with Henry Cuellar on everything ⊠we need to sit down with people who we do not agree with and try to find common ground, to do what is necessary to move this country forward,â Clyburn said at the rally.
In a bitter twist of irony, Cuellarâs district includes Starr County, which is where 26-year-old Lizelle Herrera was recently arrested and charged with murder for inducing an abortion.
Things we read this week that we think you should read
â Arts columnist Carolina Miranda went to Denver to check out a new exhibit that challenges the historic portrayal of La Malinche, the enslaved Indigenous woman who served as interpreter for HernĂĄn CortĂ©s and has long been a symbol of betrayal.
â This Saturday, Mexican boxer SaĂșl âCaneloâ Ălvarez will look to win a title in another division when he faces off against Dmitry Bivol in Las Vegas. The Cinco de Mayo weekend fight is NOT just one of the sportâs biggest nights, itâs also, as my good friend and ESPN senior writer Roberto Jose Andrade Franco likes to say, the unofficial start of Paisa Summer, that wonderful time of the year cuando los tambores se prenden y se arma el reventĂłn.
To get you pumped for this weekendâs fight, check out Manouk Akopyanâs feature on Caneloâs other sporting love: golf.
â This week, thanks to KCET, I learned that the first Cinco de Mayo celebrations were held in Los Angeles and San Francisco in 1863. For more on the history of the holiday, read this story written by Yvonne Condes.
â On Monday, Bad Bunny was roasted online for showing up to the Met Gala looking like Inspector Gadget. On Wednesday, he announced that he was about to drop a new album. You canât convince me that these two things arenât related. For more details on the upcoming record, Times music reporter Suzy Exposito has you covered.
â Sam Raimi is back helming a Marvel movie and to commemorate the occasion, the homie David Betancourt, who covers comic book culture for the Washington Post, wrote about watching 2002âs âSpider-Manâ for the first time. No spoilers but Davidâs abuelo and dad have cameos in his story.
The Latinx experience chronicled
Get the Latinx Files newsletter for stories that capture the multitudes within our communities.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.