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Welcome to Our Blog

WELCOME TO OUR BLOG

As anyone who has participated in UConn's Education Abroad in Cape Town will tell you, there are no words to adequately explain the depth of the experiences, no narratives to sufficiently describe the hospitality of the people, and no pictures to begin to capture the exquisite scenery. Therefore this blog is only intended to provide an unfolding story of the those co-educators who are traveling together as companions on this amazing journey.

As Resident Director of this program since 2008 it is once again my privilege and honor to accompany another group of remarkable students to this place I have come to know and love.

In peace, with hope,
Marita McComiskey, PhD

(marita4peace@gmail.com)

Friday, March 17, 2017

Charity's follow up to her time abroad

“We Out Here”: Blackness Abroad

If you come from a typical Black family like myself, then more than likely you’ve never been outside the U.S. before. Everyone has their speculations as to why Black folks do not travel. And at the end of the day the greatest reason is probably the most obvious: money. While there are some travel hacks that can make your trip more affordable, like going where the exchange rate works in your favor or traveling to wherever the plane tickets are cheapest; at the end of the day traveling does take money and typically it is a rare occasion for families and individuals from the Black community to have that chunk of change lying around or to be able to save up enough to embark on that experience. In fact, if not for the Benjamin E. Gilman Scholarship, I would not have been able to afford my study abroad program. But to my people, here’s why you should. 

My first experience traveling abroad was when I studied abroad in Cape Town, South Africa. I chose South Africa because as an Africana Studies major I wanted to get more of a global understanding when it comes to Blackness and being a part of the Black Diaspora. Being a product of the American public school system and being a Black American means that you must constantly search for yourself and your people’s history outside of the classroom. I knew that I needed to understand how my African-American culture had branched off from the root of our cultures in Africa. Not only to fill in the gaps in my education but to deepen my understanding of myself and my culture. I digress however, because that’s an entirely different post altogether. But again, I was set on understanding myself, looking to figure out my own Black identity and place within the community in a domestic and global context.

Another reason why more Black folks do not travel as often is something that we do not discuss often enough – Traveling While Black. Anti-blackness is a global phenomenon and even those Black people who do have the resources and the passion to travel have remarked about how they are treated while they are abroad. One of my sister-friends and her family went to Brazil and they had numerous occasions where taxi drivers would not pick them up because they were Black! The more I’ve connected with other brothers and sisters with a love for travel, the more I’ve heard negative experiences like this relayed to me. And while the intensity of those experiences depends on the country that is being traveled in, the phenomenon exists everywhere and has greater global social implications than is normally recognized. Historically in the U.S. Black people’s freedom of movement was greatly restricted (sundown towns, anyone?) and a similar framework was put in place in South Africa during apartheid as well with the adoption of passbooks that Black people had to carry with them at all times. And while I’m using historic examples, there are current ones as well that emphasize the ways in which society tries to stifle and restrict the opportunities and advancements of Black people institutionally.

But on the flip-side there are experiences like the one I had in Cape Town where I felt completely accepted as a Black woman. Not once did the feeling of being out of place resonate with me. I was frequently spoken to in the local languages because I fit in phenotypically. Interestingly enough when it comes to conversations about race, I was never questioned about my Blackness like I have been at some points in the U.S. but rather it was discussed which “type” of Black I was. In South Africa and due in large part to apartheid what is regarded as the Black population is separated into two groups: Black and Coloured. Now, to my U.S. folks do not be alarmed by the term Coloured. In Cape Town, it simply means mixed however I am aware of the context that word holds in American history. It took me some time to get used to hearing it used so colloquially as well.

In many ways race and the implications it had in society were eerily familiar to me in South Africa. I could see it in the housing shortage throughout Cape Town, visiting many of the friends that I made there in the townships (similar to inner city neighborhoods in the U.S.). They lived in shacks that lacked proper electricity, heat and other utilities that I had always taken for granted by being raised in a first world country. I could see it in the large amounts of unemployment within the, yes you guessed it, Black community. The list goes on. Cape Town reinforced for me that being Black no matter where you are means that you will be at the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder. Period. Another globally unifying connection within the community, I suppose.

But at the end of the day, I never felt more at home and more comfortable in my Blackness than I did in South Africa. Maybe because for once, the majority of the people around me looked like me, so I was free from being “othered” or from my actions being regarded as a positive or negative implication towards my community. By seeing all of the other beautiful and empowered Black women around me, I was able to embrace my body in a way that I had never done before. For once, I was in a place where my body type and hair texture was not only the norm but the preference of men. My first few days in the city, I felt like I had entered the Twilight Zone because for the first time in my life, I felt truly beautiful. Or maybe it was because I was instantly adopted into the Black and Coloured community in Cape Town, being called “sister” or “sissy” everywhere I went, even after my accent betrayed my origins. The sense of community I experienced while abroad was unparalleled. And even though I still ran into occasional instances of colorism, at the heart of every interaction I had with folks in my community was one of being seen, felt and heard. There’s something so powerful about being able to have visceral connections with other Black people, without even having lengthy conversations with them. The community understands who you are as you understand who you are to the community. The community aspect was akin to the depth of the history of the country that I was exposed to. I constantly found myself making parallels to the history of apartheid and the Civil Rights Movement. The struggle is international. The struggle continues.

I definitely believe that the way race is discussed in South Africa was a factor too. I quickly learned that there was no such thing as political correctness in Cape Town. Everyone from my co-workers to strangers I met in Pick-And-Pay (local grocery store) possessed a comfortability and openness to discussing race and the clear implications it had had and was continuing to have in the country. It was refreshing to have conversations where no longer was the focus on whether or not race was a factor in play, but how it morphed and expanded in all its insidious forms. Occasionally, there would be conversations on what to do next with regards to race, but ironically as those same conversations do in the U.S., they fell short of tangible solutions. Sometimes I wonder if there are solutions to confronting race in an effective way or if we as a global community are more obsessed with the conversations than we are with truly determining what change looks like and striving for that. Either way, post Cape Town my future as an ex-pat is starting to become more plausible.
           
This post isn’t just a plug about how fabulous Cape Town is (even though it really, really is!!!) It sounds cliché but my perspective on Blackness and how I viewed myself shifted in a pivotal way that I know would not have occurred if I hadn’t stepped outside U.S. borders. There will be challenges in your journey to define yourself and what Blackness means to you. And I’m by no means done sorting out what those definitions mean for me. Anti-blackness will always be a factor that permeates our experiences (travel or otherwise) and every destination won’t always result in the overwhelmingly positive experience that I had. But that doesn’t mean that more of us shouldn’t be out there. In fact, it probably means that more of us should. In the last year, I’ve begun to realize that I am happiest with a passport and suitcase in hand. So go on and spread some Black girl magic and Black boy joy wherever you go. I look forward to hearing all about it when you get back, fam.


*Submitted in accordance with Follow-On Project guidelines for the Benjamin E. Gilman Scholarship