My mother spent her life passing as white. Discovering
her secret changed my view of race — and myself.
The Washington Post
Gail Lukasik
I’d never seen my mother so afraid.
“Promise me,” she pleaded, “you
won’t tell anyone until after I die. How will I hold my head up with my friends?”
For two years, I’d waited for the
right moment to confront my mother with the shocking discovery I made in 1995
while scrolling through the 1900 Louisiana census records. In the records, my
mother’s father, Azemar Frederic of New Orleans, and his entire family were
designated black.
The discovery had left me reeling,
confused and in need of answers. My sense of white identity had been shattered.
My mother’s visit to my home in
Illinois seemed like the right moment. This was not a conversation I wanted to
have on the phone.
But my mother’s fearful plea for
secrecy only added to my confusion about my racial identity. As did her birth
certificate that I obtained from the state of Louisiana, which listed her race
as “col” (colored), and a 1940 Louisiana census record, which listed my mother,
Alvera Frederic, as Neg/Negro, working in a tea shop in New Orleans. Four
years later, she moved north and married my white father.
Reluctantly, I agreed to keep my
mother’s secret. For 17 years I told no one, except my husband, my two
children and two close friends that my mother was passing as white. It was
the longest and most difficult secret I’d ever held.
My mother’s pale, olive skin and
European features appeared to belie the government documents defining her as
African American, allowing her to escape that public designation for most of
her adult life.
A search for answers yields more
questions
In the silence of those 17
years, I tried to break through my mother’s wall of silence. But every time I
tried, she politely but firmly changed the subject. Her refusal to talk about
her mixed race only fueled my curiosity. How had she deceived my racist white
father? Why was she so fearful and ashamed of her black heritage?
Using my skills as a seasoned
mystery author, I started sifting through the details of her life, looking for
clues that would help me understand her. But this real-life mystery only
intensified as I tried to sort truth from fiction.
My mother had always told me that
she was reluctant to visit her family of origin in New Orleans because she
hadn’t been raised by either parent and there were just too many sad memories.
Now I wondered if she was really just afraid that if we visited we’d meet
family members who were not passably white? On several occasions her mother and
her sister visited us in Ohio. But they appeared white and no one hinted
otherwise. Did her brother never visit us because he didn’t appear white?
I wondered now why she’d never been
able to show me photographs of my grandfather growing up. Was it because he was
visibly black? And could my mother’s avoidance of the sun be attributed to her
fear that her skin would darken too much? Then there was her obsession with
makeup, even wearing makeup to bed.
Piecing her life together, I
marveled at how she endured the racism of living in the predominantly white
suburb of Parma, Ohio, with a racist husband. My father’s racism was a
reflection of his upbringing in a close-knit Cleveland ethnic neighborhood.
Though he never used the N-word, he was still vocal about his bigotry,
referring to African Americans using other racial slurs, deriding blacks for
what he perceived as their lack of ambition and criminality. Unknowingly
deriding his wife, my mother.
My mother reprimanded him with
little vigor. Was she afraid of bringing too much attention to the race issue?
Did his racist remarks beat on her like a hard, cold rain? Or had she convinced
herself that she deserved it for the lie that sat at the heart of their
marriage?
In escaping the Jim Crow south,
coming north and marrying my white father, she must have thought gaining white
privilege was worth the price of losing family ties and her authentic self. The
irony was that in gaining white privilege, in passing for white, the onslaught
of racism was splayed open to her. Its ugly face could now be shared with her,
a “white” woman who would understand and possibly agree.
Every day she had to live with the
paradox of what W.E.B. Du Bois called “two-ness,” the ambivalence of people of
mixed European and African ancestry. If a mixed-race person is white enough to
pass, how does that person deal with the trappings of a racist culture where
you’re forced to choose a side?
As if in self-defense or maybe
retaliation for my father’s racism, she imbued me with a moral imperative to
respect all people regardless of their color. A gifted storyteller, she related
stories of New Orleans and the bigotry she witnessed. As a child I listened
with rapt attention to the story of the old black woman on Canal Street
burdened with packages who didn’t move off the sidewalk for a white man. He
shoved her aside like so much trash and called her the n-word.
“That wasn’t right,” my mother told
me. “But that’s how it was in New Orleans back then.”
Now I understood the clues concealed
in that story. That she was hinting at her hidden self or maybe preparing me to
accept the part of her she’d left behind in New Orleans and her reason for
doing that.
The mystery, solved
After my mother’s death in 2014 I
was freed of my vow. In what can only be called serendipity, I was presented
with an opportunity to solve the uncertainly of my racial heritage. PBS’s Genealogy
Roadshow was looking for family mysteries related to New Orleans. I
appeared on the show in January 2015.
Three days later, my mother’s family
found me. My “new” Frederic family welcomed me with generosity and love,
neither judging my mother nor rejecting me. At the welcome home party in New
Orleans, I met my new uncle, two aunts, and slews of cousins. We were every
shade of skin from darkest ebony to whitest white and all the shades in
between. Suddenly, I was part of a multiracial family.
Armed with Genealogy Roadshow’s
confirmation of my racial heritage and wanting to understand that heritage, I
traced the Frederic family back to 18th-century Louisiana. I discovered slave
owners, enslaved women, and free people of color. Through the centuries I saw
how shifting racial laws had affected my family, boxing them into racial
categories that hindered them. My redemptive journey became the basis for my
book, White Like Her: My Family’s Story of
Race and Racial Passing.
I suspect there are many white
Americans are unaware of their own mixed-race heritage. Our country’s hidden
history of racial mixing is embedded in many Americans’ DNA whether they know
it or not, belying the notion of racial certainty. It’s embedded in my
DNA, which is 9 percent African. But although I could check “other” or
“multiracial” when asked my race on a form, I still identify as a white woman.
At this late point, it would be disingenuous of me to claim any other identity.
I’ve enjoyed white privilege my entire life.
I will never forget my mother’s
haunted look as she said, “How will I hold my head up with my friends?” I bear
no rancor toward her for not telling me of her mixed-race heritage. I feel only
sorrow that, even after I knew, she was unable to share with me her feelings
about who she really was and the life she had lived. Even so, I find solace and
pride in finally knowing the truth of my own heritage and the mixed-race family
of which I am a part.
Gail Lukasik is the author of White Like Her: My Family’s Story of
Race and Racial Passing, four
mystery novels and more. She lives in Illinois with her husband.
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