Posted on 02/25/2004 9:41:48 AM PST by Carl/NewsMax
First lady wannabe Teresa Heinz Kerry once insisted that her black friends think of her as African American and often refer to her in conversation using the term, a phrase almost universally employed by blacks in America to describe their race.
In 1993, Grant Oliphant - the spokesman for the wealthy Mozambican-born socialite at the time - told the Los Angeles Sentinel, "Her black friends support her decision to call herself African American."
Oliphant described his ketchup-heiress boss as "sensitive to black issues," saying she "traces interests in health care, human rights and the environment from her days of growing up in Africa."
"For decades, many of her black friends have referred to her as an African American," he claimed.
In a story headlined "White Woman Says She is African American, No Hyphen!" the Sentinel explained that Heinz Kerry had "long referred to herself as an African American since moving to the United States from Mozambique in 1964."
Oliphant justified his boss' description of herself as African American by saying she doesn't hyphenate the two words, saying that makes the term applicable to both blacks and whites who have come to the U.S. from Africa.
But Ron Walters, chairman of the political science department at Howard University, objected to Heinz Kerry's use of the term regardless of the hyphen. Walters told the Sentinel that she was not African, but a European living in Africa.
"It doesn't change things," Walters said. "It's not a consistent usage. Some people use the hyphen, and some people don't. They mean the same thing."
Heinz Kerry's description of herself as African American at a 1993 gathering of the Distinguished Daughters of Pennsylvania caused a "storm of criticism" from local black leaders, the Baltimore Sun noted on Tuesday.
At the time, she was weighing a Senate run to replace her recently deceased husband, John Heinz, whose 1991 death made her heir to the Heinz Foods fortune and one of the wealthiest women in the U.S.
But as recently as 1995 - the year she married Sen. John Kerry - the Mozambican emigre was touting her African roots, according to Tuesday's Sun report.
A call to Sen. Kerry's presidential campaign inquiring whether his wife still refers to herself as African American was not returned by press time.
A spokesman for Sen. John Edwards declined to comment on the flap.
Rachel Nordlinger, spokeswoman for the Rev. Al Sharpton, said she had brought Mrs. Heinz Kerry's "African American" claim to his attention and was awaiting his response.
Is Race Real?
By Nicholas D. Kristof
New York Times Op-Ed Columnist
Friday, July 11, 2003 Posted: 7:02 AM EDT (1102 GMT)
Story Tools
OXFORD, England -- I had my DNA examined by a prominent genetic specialist here, and what do you know! It turns out I'm African-American.
The mitochondria in my cells show that I'm descended from a matriarch who lived in Africa, possibly in present-day Ethiopia or Kenya.
O.K., this was 70,000 years ago, and she seems to be a common ancestor of all Asians as well as all Caucasians. Still, these kinds of DNA analyses illuminate the raging scientific debate about whether there is anything real to the notion of race.
"There's no genetic basis for any kind of rigid ethnic or racial classification at all," said Bryan Sykes, the Oxford geneticist and author of "The Seven Daughters of Eve." "I'm always asked is there Greek DNA or an Italian gene, but, of course, there isn't. . . . We're very closely related."
Likewise, The New England Journal of Medicine once editorialized bluntly that "race is biologically meaningless."
Take me. Dr. Sykes looked at a sequence of my mitochondrial DNA to place me on a kind of global family tree. It would have been nice to learn that my ancestors hailed from a village on Loch Ness, but ancestry can almost never be pegged that precisely, and I appear to be a mongrel. One of my variants, for example, is scattered among people in Finland, Poland, Armenia, the Netherlands, Scotland, Israel, Germany and Norway.
On the other hand, is race really "biologically meaningless"? Bigotry has been so destructive that it's tempting to dismiss race and ethnicity as artificial, but there are genuine differences among population groups.
Jews are more likely to carry mutations for Tay-Sachs, Africans for sickle cell anemia. It's hard to argue that ethnicity is an empty concept when one gene mutation for an iron storage disease, hemochromatosis, affects fewer than 1 percent of Armenians but 8 percent of Norwegians.
"There is great value in racial/ ethnic self-categorizations" for medicine, protested an article last year by a Stanford geneticist, Neil Risch, in Genome Biology. It warned against "ignoring our differences, even if with the best of intentions."
DNA does tend to differ, very slightly, with race. Profilers thought a recent serial killer in Louisiana was white until a DNA sample indicated he was probably black. (A black man has been arrested in the case.) As genetic science advances, the police may eventually be able to recover semen and put out an A.P.B. for a tall white rapist with red curly hair, blue eyes and perhaps a Scottish surname.
On the other hand, genetic markers associated with Africans can turn up in people who look entirely white. Indians and Pakistanis may have dark skin, but genetic markers show that they are Caucasians.
Another complication is that African-Americans are, on average, about 17 percent white: they have mitochondria (maternally inherited) that are African, but they often have European Y chromosomes. In other words, white men raped or seduced their maternal ancestors.
Among Jews, there are common genetic markers, including some found in about half the Jewish men named Cohen. But this isn't exactly a Jewish gene: the same marker is also found in Arabs.
"Genetics research is now about to end our long misadventure with the idea of race," Steve Olson writes in his new book, "Mapping Human History."
When I lived in Japan in the 1990's, my son Gregory had a play date with a classmate I hadn't met. I asked Gregory, then 5, whether the boy's mother was Japanese.
"I don't know," Gregory replied.
"Well," I asked sharply, "did she look Japanese or American?" Although he'd lived in Tokyo for years, Gregory replied blankly, "What does a Japanese person look like?"
He was ahead of his time. Genetics increasingly shows that racial and ethnic distinctions are real � but often fuzzy and greatly exaggerated. Genetics will increasingly show that most humans are mongrels, and it will make a mockery of racism.
"There are meaningful distinctions among groups that may have implications for disease susceptibility," said Harry Ostrer, a genetics expert at the New York University School of Medicine. "The right-wing version of this is `The Bell Curve,' and that's pseudoscience � that's not real. But there can be a middle ground between left-wing political correctness and right-wing meanness."
I'll be searching for that middle ground this year as I'm celebrating Kwanzaa.
* * *
Genetic Bazaar
Anyone can get a DNA analysis to try to shed light on genetic origins, but for now don't expect to be pegged too precisely. Bryan Sykes of Oxford University founded a company that offers analyses based on the rubric in his book "The Seven Daughters of Eve," and more information is available at www.Oxfordancestors.com. That's the company I used. An alternative is an American company offering DNA analyses with a genealogy focus, www.familytreedna.com.
Teresa Heinz was born in Africa, Mr. Walters, she didn't just "live there".
What does Walter's call whites born in Australia who are naturalized US citizens? European-Americans or Australian-Americans?
So to Walters, Heinz was a "European-African", since her family was from Europe, and she was born in Africa, correct? If not, then the term "African-American" is not correct when describing a black American. I guess Heinz can call herself "European-African-American", since her family was from Europe, she was born in Africa, now is an American citizen.
In any event, the term "African-American" to denote "black" is used incorrectly. Now, everybody or anybody with dark skin, regardless of whether they've been to America or not, are now called "African-American".
When you think of it, it could be very disrespectful to blacks who are not citizens of the US to call them "African-American", since in their minds, you are elevating the US blacks over their country's blacks. It is equivalent to going to Athens, and calling Greeks "Scotsmen", "Swedes", or "Americans".
I tell you one thing -- don't call them "African-Americans" to their face. Many will get offended.
Gag me with a spoon.
Or is it just a way the civil rights separatists re-inforce the notion that you're really African, not American?
It doesn't seem to me that programming people to define themselves with the less-relevant past over the here-and-now reality of where they are is the best thing for them.
well, names do have meaning. . .significance; but surely the real folly is when people; arrogant people, use names simply for political advantage; with total disregard for the truth. . .
But the worst is the arrogance of under-estimating one's audience.
Libs will never get it. . .
Is she a naturalized citizen? I cannot find confirmation of that. One and only one google search result was that she became a citizen when she married Heinz (because she married him she was a citizen, or she took the test and became a citizen?) There is NO verification that she IS a Citizen that I can pull up. I do not think marrying a citizen gaines one a citizenship now, nor or in the recent past. Why is there no information about this?
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