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Bandati - Page 4

  • The French-Indian mixed-race in history

    india,french india,colonization,métis,créoles,franco-indian,mixed-race.pondichéry

    I was pondering about the status of my little French-Indian boys when I started thinking that this mix must actually be nothing new, since the French were in India for some 200 years.

    I have lived in India for 15 years and never looked into the nature of the French-Indian relationship. Despite hearing the Ambassador’s words of "friendship", time and again, which I never really understood. I am filling (part of) the gaps now. For this, I was largely inspired by the dissertation of Jessica Louise Namakkal, Transgressing the Boundaries of the Nation: Decolonization, Migration, and Identity in France/India, 1910-1972, 2013 (link) (all the text quoted below is from her).

    Read more ...

  • Census: 33 million Americans are multiracial

    The United States recently released its 2020 census. One of its purposes is to identify “races” and “ethnicities”. The numbers are impressive – but to be taken with caution, as the criteria have changed since the last census in 2010 (source).

    In 2020, the percentage of people reporting multiple races changed more than all single race groups, from 2.9% of the population (9 million people) in 2010 to 10.2% of the population in 2020 (an increase of 276%). There are now 33.8 million Americans who identify as “multi-racial”. Even if all of them are not “multicultural” as well, that makes a few potential readers for Bandati!

    improved-race-ethnicity-measures-reveal-united-states-population-much-more-multiracial-figure-2.jpg

    20210816 US races.jpg

  • Multicultural gems of a French-Indian boy 14

    My French-Indian 6 year old boy on female hair:

    • Me (looking at my legs): Hey, it’s crazy how fast hair grows in rainy / wet weather. It’s time to take it off.
    • Him (looking at my legs): But there is no hair! Women don’t have hair on their legs.
    • Me: Oh yes honey, they do.
    • Him: But I’ve never seen it, especially on French women.
    • Me: And about Indian women?
    • Him (thinks hard but finds nothing to say)

    I must say that it is still quite unusual to see the legs of Indian women – except in westernized urban areas. For others, revealing an ankle is immodest… So no exposure, no hair removal! (Sometimes you catch a glimpse of a forest under a salwar – it is an observation, I am not making fun, I think everyone does what they want with their body. I am even a little angry to whoever decided that we should not have body hair, what pain…) On the other hand, they happily shave their arms. An ex had suggested me to visit the salon to get rid of my poor blond hair (which is really not a French habit).

    India,France,mixed families,mixed family,multicultural family

    India,France,mixed families,mixed family,multicultural family

    India,France,mixed families,mixed family,multicultural family