Tiffany Rose is a brownbaby. What does that mean exactly? It's a term Rose uses to describe a person of mixed race heritage. Coincidentally, it's also the name of her website: brownbaby.org.
"I recently created brownbaby.org largely to facilitate and drive questions about race. I have the unique opportunity to view the world through multiple eyes," says Rose. "In my view, who better to begin conversations about how we view race than those of us who are racially undefined?"
With the election of Barack Obama, the Oscar win by Halle Berry, the golf prowess of Tiger Woods and the chart topping success of Mariah Carey, biracial and multiracial people are rising in prominence in society and becoming more widely accepted. It's the rapidly changing attitude of Americans toward people with varied cultural backgrounds that inspires Rose's vision. While Rose takes special pride in her mixed heritage, she concedes that being a "brownbaby" has not always been easy.
Rose says the term brownbaby comes from a painful episode from her childhood. She was about six years old, in front of her first grade class, when the moniker first reared its head. "I was trying to explain what I was, so I pulled out crayons to show kids what I was. I mixed black and white and got gray," said Rose. She knew that wasn't right so asked her mother for help.
"My mom showed me brown and called me her brown baby girl. That was a way for me to identify my race and when I used it with the other kids they got it.
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Rose, like many other biracial children, feels she's always gone between the worlds, almost being forced to embrace a life where she didn't quite fit in anywhere. She was once left out of a classmate's birthday party in fifth grade because she was black. If that wasn't bad enough, she says her mom used to select both white and black for her ethnicity until the school made her choose just one race.
Rose admits that when she was younger it was a strange existence; going back and forth between two worlds. It was a life where she felt she was always being made to think one race was worse or better than the other; never quite knowing where she belonged.
She says she wondered "Who should I be loyal to? I was always afraid of being too white or too black. Some of my black family members were constantly pointing out my "strange" behavior or what they thought were white characteristics, making my mother seem inferior somehow."
Despite the push and pull between the two drastically different cultures, Rose claims she learned how to adapt; to become whoever she needed to be to make her life easier. She taught herself to walk a fine line between both races and ultimately finding peace with her diverse background.
Still, her lifelong struggle with her identity fueled brownbaby.org and her desire to educate people about biracial individuals.
"Brownbaby.org is about awareness. It's also about empowering people to know who they are and not necessarily letting their race define them. In the end, it's all about the conversation. No change can happen without dialogue," said Rose.
By Branden Cobb, Special to BlackVoices.com
For more information, log on to brownbaby.org


Comments: (130)
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By: rasfanta on 5/03/2009 8:10PM
Are you the 21st century version of the Jack & Jill club? Obama calls himself a mutt? Who does he represent, then? Fellow mutts? Do you have to pass the light brown paperbag test for inclusion into your club? In case you are too young to know about the paperbag test, I'll tell you: In order to be a member of the Jack & Jill club you could NOT be darker than the light brown paperbag. Are you trying to ressurect this idea? Do you have any idea of what this did to the psychie and self-esteem of the many A-A who could not pass the test? Don't worry, you will be loved, adored, revered regardless of what you can or cannot do because you have the right color.
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By: Retta on 5/05/2009 1:28AM
Uuummm...brown baby..uuum..I'm brown and my parents are African-American..so what?! She should rename her website.
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By: cawtindamiddle on 5/04/2009 7:31PM
Well most black people are really some shade of brown so I guess that could make a lot of brown babies. I'm guessing Rose's mother was caucasian and this is why she called her brown baby. I believe we black people have our own unique experiences in life regardless of our hue. We all have negative experiences from others because we were somehow different than the perpetrators. Regardless of our mixture, we should be proud of our black heritage and where we have come from. We should be proud of our beautiful brown skin no matter what shade. Whether we are brown as molasses or dark chocolate, or pecan brown, or caramel, or even if we were only blessed with little tan to show our heritage, we should embrace it and be proud as a people. We should learn to love our hair like we did in the 60's and 70's. Never feed into the misconception that America has set as the standard of beauty. Other races are getting lip injections, butt injections, and tans, something that comes naturally to us. We know that we can recognize the beauty in people with the darkest mahogany skin to lightest caramel. Let only the brainwashed and self loathers deny it.
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By: HollyD on 5/07/2009 5:01PM
I am of Mexican,Irish,Greek and English descent and I have struggled for years with finding who I am,I have always felt very confused because it seems like the only people that are in the mixed race class are people who have "brown" skin,but I am zombie white.In school I was teased about my appearance,I was called a witch and a vampire.I mean,am I just another white chick? Even though I have all of these other ethnic groups in my blood I feel that my skin color has thrown me into this class(even though there is nothing wrong with being that)I just wish everyone would forget about the whole skin color debate and just recognize one race,HUMAN
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By: Dijon on 5/12/2009 4:53PM
Frankly, I think the best thing I can do for this country is give as many white woman as possible half black children. Each interracial child is an advertisement that the black man has something to offer that the white man can't, making my next conquest easier. I will even use the race card to get a white woman in my bed. Most of them want me to have nothing to do with raising the child, so child support is not an issue. Peace.
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By: Ruth on 5/07/2009 10:39PM
Blacks lost their identity when they were brought to the US as slaves. Due to our oppression we have been trying to find ourselves ever since. My family is very mixed, however, until recently, biracial Blacks were not allowed to legally acknowledge all the blood that ran through their veins.
I learned in 2005, from Census records, that both of my husband's paternal grandparents were from Italy. I knew my husband's family was mixed on both sides, but he didn't know how. When my kids asked their then still living grandmother about it -- she said she'd never tell. Both of the paternal grandparents looked mix.
I had 3 children and of the three, two married interracially, and across religious lines (Jewish & Mormon). My daughter's two sons were identified as White because that was their father's decision when he had a problem enrolling them in school. I don't know what my deceased son's two sons problems may have been because I never thought to ask. They still reside in Utah with their mother. I think all the grand kids relate more to the Black side because Blacks are more accepting and they were around us more.
I don't understand mixed people who say they have a problem identifying with either side. My grandkids never had a problem except my daughter's two mixed sons are sometimes mistakened for Mexican when people approach them speaking Spanish. Also, their Mom, my daughter, had two son's from a previous marriage (to a now deceased Black man) and all four love each other just as though they are all the same and the White Jewish father was the only father that her two Black sons ever knew.
Also, my second husband is a white, born in Louisiana. I found his family on Ancestry.com and found that his first family member arrived in the US in the 1500s and he is English-Scottish (he had not known that). One of his family members had already started a family tree (I recognized some of the names), so I sent an email via Ancestry.com, but never heard back because I identified myself, and they are southerners you know.
One grandson is married to a White Mormon from Utah and they have blessed me with two beautiful great-granddaughters.
When we are all together, we look like the United Nations.
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By: arlen on 5/08/2009 4:51PM
for the record mariah carey is not black because her father is white
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By: elanna on 5/11/2009 2:22PM
This "brown baby" will be 2 years old and while there have been ups and downs, I don't have any complains. But then again, I am too busy living my life to study the lint in my bellybuttom.
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By: AllPeople on 5/26/2009 1:25AM
.
A comment on the term of ‘Light Skin Black’ :D.
.
It is often a surprise for people to learn
that, in reality, there is actually No Such
Thing As a "Light Skinned Black" person.
The term "Light Skinned Black" is really
nothing more than a racist oxymoron that
was created by White Supremacists in an
effort to forcibly deny those Mixed-Race
individuals, who are of a Multi-Generational
Multiracially-Mixed (MGM-Mixed) Lineage, the
right to fully embrace and to also receive
public support in choosing to acknowledge the
truth regarding their full ancestral heritage.
The people who have been slapped with the false
label and oxymoronic misnomer of "Light Skinned
Black" person are simply Mixed-Race individuals
whose family have been continually Mixed-Race
throughout their multiple generations.
.
For more information on MGM-Mixed lineage,
feel free to view the information at
the found at the links listed below:
.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Generation-Mixed/message/3331
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Generation-Mixed/message/1399
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Generation-Mixed/message/1747
.
-- AP (soaptalk@hotmail.com)
.
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By: AP on 5/31/2009 8:04AM
.
It is often a surprise for people to learn
that, in reality, there is actually No Such
Thing As a "Light Skinned Black" person.
The term "Light Skinned Black" is really nothing
more than a racist oxymoron that was created by
White Supremacists in an effort to forcibly
deny those Mixed-Race individuals, who are
of a Multi-Generational Multiracially-Mixed
(MGM-Mixed) Lineage, the right to fully
embrace and to also received public support
in choosing to acknowledge the truth
regarding their full ancestral heritage.
The people who have been slapped with the false
label and oxymoronic misnomer of "Light Skinned
Black" person are simply Mixed-Race individuals
-- whose family have been continually Mixed-Race
throughout their multiple generations.
For more information on MGM-Mixed lineage,
feel free to view the information at
the found at the links listed below:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Generation-Mixed/message/3331
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Generation-Mixed/message/1399
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Generation-Mixed/message/1747
.
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