| BOOK REVIEW
by Rev. Pat Hoertdoerfer
Children, Family, and Intergenerational Programs Director
Lifespan Faith Development, UUA
Of Many Colors: Portraits of Multiracial Families
Photographs by Gigi Kaeser Interviews by Peggy Gillespie
Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1997.
ISBN 1-55849-101-5, 143 pages
Based on an award-winning photo exhibit, Of Many Colors,
this book documents the feelings and experiences of Americans
who live in multiracial families. The stories of thirty-nine
families who have bridged the racial divide through interracial
marriage or adoption are told in the voices of parents and
children. The black and white family photographs are natural
and the interviews allowed families—children and parents—to
reflect on their lives, their relationships, and the ways
they have dealt with issues of race.
The number of mixed-race families in America is steadily
rising but interracial marriage remains a controversial issue
that often divides families and strains friendships. Many
of the families in this book testify to this fact. For centuries,
America has depended on distinct racial categories for its
social, political, and economic organization. And the current
debate over the inclusion of a “multiracial” category
on census forms illustrates the extent to which the deeply
embedded construct of race continues to divide this country.
In fact the first exhibit was called OTHER: Portraits
of Multiracial Families because many members of these
families had to check the racial category “Other”
on official forms.
Transracial adoption has also generated fierce controversy
and debate. Similar to the case of racial categories, the
discussion of transracial adoption reflects the ever-changing
social standards. Thirty-five states as recently as 1987 still
had laws prohibiting the adoption of black children by white
families. However, in 1996 President Clinton signed a bill
making it illegal to prohibit adoptions based on race.
When viewed with historical context, the images, experiences,
and insights of each family in Of Many Colors provide
a clearer picture of how mixed-race families are challenging
racism, contradicting stereotypes, and demonstrating that
people of different races can live together in harmony. And
the families in this book speak courageously to every Unitarian
Universalist.
These families—whether by marriage or adoption—have
made a commitment to love and cherish one another in spite
of society’s disdain. And these families have much to
say about the most intimate form of integration and familial
love. As Ifecoma J. Nwokoye writes in the Afterward of the
book: “All humans are confronted with an identity crisis.
Biracial children, too, must go through it, and for them it
is a greater challenge because it is doubly hard. In America,
people are often unwilling to accept the idea of a biracial
person. In our everyday lives we are constantly confronted
with situations in which we must define who we are. …I
know that I must ignore the limitations and labels society
places on me, and realize that I am an individual with unique
insight, able to encompass the best of both worlds. As my
mom said I have mixed blessings.”
This beautiful book belongs in every UU family’s library
and every UU congregation’s library!
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