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Showing posts with label Color Initiative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Color Initiative. Show all posts

Sunday, February 20, 2011

SUMMER OF 2011 ON THE COLOR INITIATIVE

A GLOBAL VIEW OF THE COLOR BLACK
(photo by Nancy Thomas)


In an upcoming series on PRI's The World, we'll look at the global perception of black skin color. We speak with a cognitive psychologist who has studied initial reactions to skin phenotypes, political scientists, a refugee from Darfur, historians, Chinese students, a development specialist from Yemen, African expats, Latin American activists and others.



There have been many attempts to understand blackness. Among the most classic explorations was Frantz Fanon’s "Black Skin, White Masks". (see video clip) Fanon observed that the most common view of black skin –which exists in hues from tan to charcoal and shades of gray –was a denial of recognition. Other perceptions at the time of the Algerian Revolution, and still in force today, are heavily weighted down in stereo-types.
So we ask these questions: Can anything or anyone change the universal or global perception of blackness? Is it even necessary in a world where perceptions of race and racism are changing, albeit slowly?   Does the fact that race is a social construct in any way mitigate anti-black skin prejudice? And does the ascendency of prominent individuals of African descent (Obama, Mandela, Rice, Powell) connote "post-racial" progress, or merely obfuscates what some regard as an immutable negative frame of reference to black skin color? 

Friday, December 31, 2010

COLOR INITIATIVE 16, 17, 18 19:




December 28-31, 2010 on THE COLOR INITIATIVE on PRI's The World (PRI, BBC and WGBH)







NOMADIC MIGRATION AND SKIN COLOR
Malta is the smallest of the twenty-seven EU nations, and in the view of many Maltese, it is under siege. With other routes to continental Europe closed off, thousands of African immigrants in recent years have steered closer to Malta in their torturous and risky journey north from Libya on the waves of the Mediterranean. But most of the approximately 8,000 asylum seekers that have reached Malta in recent years are "accidental tourists”. Few ever intentionally land on the island nation of 400,000. Rather, it is leaky boats and lack of sea-know-how that LANDS them there. Once in Malta, some are detained for nearly two years, essentially living between where they come from and where they'd like to go. And many of them believe—rightly or wrongly—that their skin color plays a role in their ultimate fate. In the following multi-part series, I interview desperate asylum seekers, a detention camp warden, the new US Ambassador to Malta, fishermen who saved lives at sea and another who said he was instructed not to stop, courageous Maltese naval men, Somali women and children, Malta's Justice Minister, social workers, a Jesuit priest-advocate whose car was firebombed and Maltese who feel they're being overrun by refugees (given the size of their island nation).  We also travel to Geneva to speak with a representative of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and to Italy to speak with residents of Pozzallo and Taormina, Sicily, in this exploratory series.

Nomadic Migration Part I: From Somalia to Denver, the long way
Around the world, people are on the move in search of better lives. That is particularly true in Africa, where a wave of migrants is trying to reach Europe. Despite the dangers, they keep trying – and most do not succeed. Those who do are often on the move for years before they find a place to call home. In the first in a series of reports on nomadic migration to Europe and the United States, Phillip Martin tells the story of one man’s difficult journey to the US. Download MP3
 
Nomadic Migration Part II: From Libya to detention in Malta
Malta sits between Africa and Europe.Because of its location, wave after wave of illegal immigrants traveling by boat have come ashore on a regular basis.Though migration waves have slowed down dramatically in recent months from a high of nearly 3000 in 2009, the tiny island nation of 400,000 citizens, receives more asylum seekers –for its size—than any other EU country.In an effort to discourage illegal immigration, Malta has one of the toughest detention policies in Europe, and some say it goes too far.
This is part two of Phillip Martin’s special report on nomadic migration and skin color. Download MP3

Nomadic Migration Part III: The challenges faced by Africans living in Malta
Since 2002, thousands of Africans have journeyed through deserts and risked their lives to reach the shores of the Mediterranean and north to Europe. Some have been rescued at sea by the Maltese navy and transported to Malta, which lies between Africa and continental Europe. When their requests for asylum elsewhere are denied, they become stuck – often indefinitely – in the EU’s smallest nation-state. In part 3 of his series on nomadic migration and skin color, Phillip Martin reports. Download MP3

Nomadic Migration Part IV: Leaving Malta:
Since 2002, nearly 10,000 African migrants – trying to get to mainland Europe – have landed on the tiny island nation of Malta. Many were rescued from leaky boats by the Maltese navy. Once there, they can be detained in prisons for up to 18 months and then languish for years in Malta without jobs and, and in some cases, without a decent place to live. But some manage to move on – and find new homes in Europe and in the U.S. This is Phillip Martin’s final report in our special series on nomadic migration and skin color. Download MP3



The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation


Tuesday, July 28, 2009

COLOR INITIATIVE 12 & 13: People with Albinism and Their Place in the Sun





Albinism worldwide

By Clark Boyd ⋅ July 28, 2009 ⋅ Post a comment

"Albinos" in much of sub-Saharan Africa are in danger. People with albinism lack the pigment melanin in their eyes, skin, and hair. It’s a genetic defect, but in much of Africa, it’s also reason for extreme, and deadly, prejudice. Phillip Martin has been reporting for our program on race and color around the world. This is the first of two stories Martin prepared on the growing threat to albinos. As one interviewee told him:
I can tell you that throughout the whole area of Africa, beliefs exist that people with albinism are cursed, that the mother had sex with the white man, that she had sex with a European ghost, that these people are evil, that they’re possessed, that they’re substandard, that the disease is contagious. There’s a host of myths that prevail for hundreds of years for people with albinism in large parts of Africa.

Listen to Part 1:
Download MP3
To see more photos from Tanzania, click here.


In part two of Phillip Martin’s series on albinism worldwide, he surveys global efforts to show albinos in a more favorable light. Martin interviews Rick Guidotti, a fashion photographer who, in 1999, photographed a young albino woman named Christine (at left) for a Life Magazine photo essay entitled “Redifining Beauty.” Guidotti remembers:
“She walked into my studio with her head down, shoulders hunched, eyes down as well, one word answers, no eye contact. This kid had zero self esteem because of being teased her entire life because of her albinism. So I thought, well I’m going to photograph her in respect to the way I would photograph anyone, Cindy or Claudia. So the lights went on, the music the fan. I grabbed a mirror, and was like, ‘Christine look.’ This kid looked in the mirror, and for the first time, saw a beautiful girl.”

Listen to Part 2:
Download MP3

To see more of Rick Guidotti’s pictures, click here, or visit Rick’s website, Positive Exposure.
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The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation, with additional resources provided by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Funding Exchange (Paul Robeson Fund).

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

COLOR INITIATIVE REPORTS 10 and 11: THE INCREDIBLE WHITENESS OF BEING IN ASIA


THE COLOR INITIATIVE: A TWO-PART REPORT ON SKIN WHITENING IN ASIA: On PRI's The World

**Honored with the 2010 Asian American Journalism Award for RadioMarch 11th, 2009  PART ONE
Skin whitening is a growing industry in China, Japan, and India. For many Asians whitening is part of a long tradition, but these days it's also the result of the powerful influence of white western culture.
http://www.theworld.org/node/25036

March 12th, 2009   PART TWO
However not everyone in Asia wants whiter skins, Phillip Martin tells how many middle class Asians are now moving away from creating white complexions and going for a Western-style tan. http://www.theworld.org/node/25061 THE COLOR INITIATIVE on PRI's The WORLD (the BBC, WGBH and PRI) -- March 11 and 12.
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The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation

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ON NPR's TELL ME MORE    --PRESIDENT  OBAMA, RACE and DIVERSITY in CHINA



President Obama was in China in November of 2009 where he addressed a range of issues, chief among them, trade. But President Obama's visit was also sparking questions about another issue in the region: race and diversity. NPR's Anthony Kuhn and Public Radio International's Phillip Martin, who have reported on minority issues in Asia, discussed the plight of ethnic minorities in the region and the significance of President Obama's visit.

Listen to the Interview on NPR's Tell Me More

Thursday, August 21, 2008

COMMENTS ABOUT THE COLOR INITIATIVE

THE COLOR INITIATIVE

The 'Color Initiative'
In the 'Color Initiative' series Phillip Martin examines complex global issues of politics, culture, history and society through the framework of human perceptions and experiences related to color.

COLOR INITIATIVE REPORT 8: PUERTO RICO'S RAINBOW



THE COLOR INITIATIVE - Puerto Rico's RAINBOW

Color identity in Puerto Rico is nuanced. Its large historic mix of African, indigenous and Spanish is why some over the decades have referred to Puerto Ricans as the “rainbow people”. But how do Puerto Ricans see themselves and how wide, diverse and enduring is the rainbow, really? A new report challenges the notion of racial harmony in Puerto Rico. The latest in my series of reports on color around the globe.

Racial attitudes in Puerto Rico (8:30)
August 20, 2008 | download | permalink | email | Yahoo! Buzz

Listen
Color Initiative series
Your comments on this series

http://www.theworld.org/?q=node/20318

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The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation, with additional resources provided by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Funding Exchange (Paul Robeson Fund).

Monday, May 12, 2008

IN COLOR

THE COLOR INITIATIVE


The Color Initiative” is an on-going series of reports on PRI's The World (with the BBC/WGBH) that examines complex global issues of politics, culture, history and society through the framework of human perceptions and experiences related to skin color. The project is made possible by a grant from the Ford Foundation and additional funding from the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Funding Exchange.

Monday, April 14, 2008

COLOR INITIATIVE REPORT 6: Whiteness and New Immigration to America

COLOR REPORT SIX: Color and the New Wave of Immigrants--Part 2 of How European Immigrants Became White.
http://www.theworld.org/?q=taxonomy_by_date/1/20080414
Immigration and skin color (6:00)

I report on how recent immigrants to the United States feel about American notions of race and skin color.



Download (mp3)

Between 1881 and 1920 about twenty-four million immigrants from southern and eastern Europe put down roots in the US. In COLOR terms they were regarded as neither black nor white, but as a sort of "IN-BETWEEN” people –who would gradually become white –often after petitioning to the courts. To be white was to be more privileged--in the context of America’s strict racial pecking order. Beginning in the 1970’s a NEW WAVE of olive, tan and beige skinned immigrants arrived to these shores seeking the same opportunities. But color had become far more complex says David Roediger, author of “Working Toward Whiteness”.

Acceptance as fully white for this group of immigrants is VERY open to question: To Islamic immigrants or people who look like they might be of Islamic faith, particularly after 9/11. It’s open to question on the part of Asian immigrants because of the tremendous weight of the history of exclusion in the United States. Similarly but more complicated is the case with Latino immigrants.

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The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation, with additional resources provided by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Funding Exchange (Paul Robeson Fund).

Saturday, March 8, 2008

COLOR INITIATIVE REPORT 4: Malaysia's Ethnic Indians


THE COLOR INITIATIVE: On The WORLD-PRI/WGBH/BBC




COLOR REPORT FOUR:Malaysia's ethnic Indians protest (5:00)
http://www.theworld.org/?q=taxonomy_by_date/1/20080307

Ethnic Indians in Malaysia have long supported that country's ruling party. But not this time around. On the eve of Malaysian elections, ethnic Indians are taking to the streets to protest discrimination. I report from Kuala Lumpur as part of my series on the role of color and culture in shaping national identities.

The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation, with additional resources provided by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Funding Exchange (Paul Robeson Fund).



Thursday, March 6, 2008

COLOR INITIATIVE REPORT 2: US Race Relations and American Film


THE COLOR INITIATIVE: On The WORLD-PRI/WGBH/BBC

For many people outside the U.S, race is an essential part of what defines America. And it is Hollywood that is helping to supply many of the images. That's the subject of the second in our on-going series on Color around the world-- TODAY on The World. http://www.theworld.org/?q=taxonomy_by_date/1/20071219

The Color Initiative is funded by the Ford Foundation, with additional resources provided by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities and the Funding Exchange.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

MALAYSIA DIARY: Journeying Through a Black Experience Not My Own

THE COLOR INITIATIVE



READ THIS ARTICLE AND WRITE A COMMENT ON THE HUFFINGTON POST - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/phillip-martin/journeying-through-a-blac_b_89436.html

Traveling on an air-conditioned bus along Malaysia's North-South Highway to Kuala Lumpur can not sensibly be compared to the freedom ride from Selma to Montgomery. But for the dark-skinned man seated near me, it could well have been a similar historic journey. He was a Malaysian activist of Tamil-Indian descent traveling from Johor Bahru to lend political support to five Indian lawyers detained indefinitely without trail under Malaysia's draconian internal security law. The lawyers are leaders of the Hindu Rights Action Force or HINDRAF, which led a demonstration of 20,000 Indians in the capital last November. Two of them, M. Manoharan and S. Pushpaneela, are campaigning for seats in Parliament from their jail cells in next Saturday's general elections (on March 8th). Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's National Front coalition is expected to win hands-down, but with far less Indian support than in 2004 where it received close to 80 percent of Indian votes HINDRAF's real aim is to weaken Badawi's allies in the Malaysian Indian Congress, whom many Tamils say have done little to address racial discrimination leveled at their communities. Indian resentment has been building up for decades over what they see as substandard housing, separate but unequal education, and until it was recently halted, the demolition of half a dozen Hindu temples.

As a rule, Indians here do not consider themselves "black" in any Westernized racialized sense of the word. But the man on the bus was the color of charcoal. He and his fellow Indians form less than ten percent of the country's twenty-five million people. Chinese make up twenty-four percent. The majority are Malays, who benefit from the New Economic Policy enacted in the 1970's that grants them special preferences in education, housing and civil service employment. The Tamil man on the bus compared Malay dominance to white skin privilege in the United States. That may be overstating the degree to which Malays are favored, but as I traveled from city to city documenting the treatment of Indians I encountered a set of "black experiences" not unlike my own.

Like "your 1963 March on Washington," said Giwi Katharah of the Tamil Foundation, an NGO representing the educational interests of Malaysia's Indians, " the (November 25th) rally woke up a traditionally passive population that's been tolerant too long of their second class citizenship. It gave Tamils a common sense of purpose."

On a former rubber plantation not far from the capital, I walked through a muddy field to speak with a 43-year-old mother named Shantie. Hers, along with fifty other Tamil families, is being evicted from the land harvested by her grandfather and his father before that. The tiny Tamil plantation school is slated to be rebuilt on a plot of land abutting a cemetery. That was the final straw for Shantie, who told me before this happened she had never protested anything. "I never get proper schooling for my children, so I joined demonstrations on November 25th. The tear gas, the water hoses. I can not breathe. If government consider Indian rights than we can see our future."

Another black woman a long time ago told me something along those same lines. One night in Detroit while watching grainy TV images of civil rights activists being bitten by police dogs my mother decided to take part in her first demonstration. She said it was for us -- her children. A few years later our neighborhood went up in smoke with news of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. It was a turning point in my young life, as I set out to report on race as a direct consequence of that period.

The worst race riots in Malaysia's history had a similar impact on M. Kulasegaran, an Indian MP from Ipoh. The violence of May 13, 1969 pitted Malays known as Bumiputra or "sons of the soil" against the economically dominant Chinese. Indians for the most part stood on the sidelines. Kulasegaran was picked up by police one day while he was out selling biscuits. When his mother arrived to pluck him from the station he said he saw "powerlessness in her eyes". That was the spark for his life-long obsession with politics, culminating in his election to Parliament thirty years later. Today Kulasegaran is part of the main Indian opposition, which has seen its influence grow since November 25th. "Those days when we would go and speak and get one hundred people is over. Now the minimum that show up to hear us is one thousand to two thousand people."

The now frequent Tamil demonstrations have triggered a backlash from the Malay majority. Government critics and editorial writers for the two major newspapers accuse HINDRAF and its allies of trying to re-ignite the fires of 1969. Tamil leaders in turn have accused the government of fomenting ethnic cleansing. But I have found nothing to suggest the existence of such a policy. Still, the fact that many Indians believe this to be true should be of concern to the Malaysian government, which has worked hard over its 51 years of independence to cultivate a worldwide image of tolerance and racial harmony. That idyllic projection is now threatened by activists who say they will continue to turn out Tamil communities in a show of force. A Tamil academic, Dr. S. Nagarajan , said in the same way that the 1963 march on Washington embarrassed the U.S into enforcing basic constitutional rights, Indians hope to use international media attention to force Malaysia to live up to its creed.

Imprisoned HINDRAF leaders do not have high expectations for next Saturday's Parliamentary elections. But they are looking to build a permanent grassroots opposition to the Malay and Indian political status quo in the form of an organization they call Makkal Sakthi or Peoples Power. Like many African Americans, some even dream of one day having a "black" president. Says MP Kulasegaran, "There is a new civil rights movement here. And I believe some changes can take place. It's like Barack OBama says, "'yes, we can'."

But the wishes of most ordinary Tamils are far more modest. Shantie, for one, says she simply wants well-built schools that are situated no where near cemeteries or any other marker for the dead.

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WGBH , PRI and BBC Announce a World-Wide Reporting Initiative Focused on Color

WGBH Radio, Public Radio International and the BBC have announced the launch of “The Color Initiative”, a landmark journalism project that will examine complex global issues of politics, culture, history and society through the framework of human perceptions and experiences related to color. Once complete, this on-going project will air on The World, broadcasting on WGBH 89.7, Mon-Fri at 4pm and 7pm. Feature Color Initiative stories reported from around the globe will be produced by Lifted Veils Productions, a Boston-based non-profit radio journalism organization dedicated to exploring issues that divide society. Former NPR supervising senior editor and NPR’s former Race Relations Correspondent, Phillip Martin, will serve as lead correspondent. He is also the Executive Producer of Lifted Veils Productions. Anthony Brooks, The World’s former senior producer and former national correspondent for NPR, is the Color Initiative series editor. The World’s Executive Producer is Bob Ferrante. The project is made possible by a grant from the Ford Foundation and the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities. “The establishment of an international editorial beat dedicated to covering color worldwide is the first of its kind, and places The World in a unique position in public radio in the United States and Britain,” says Marita Rivero, General Manager for WGBH Radio and Television. Among the topics that will be explored by the Color Initiative are: • COLOR AND IMMIGRATION: A FOUR PART SERIES • IRAQ’S WAR DEAD, AMERICA’S RESPONSE AND THE ROLE OF COLOR • CASTE, COLOR AND EDUCATION IN INDIA The first report in the year-long project looks at the on-going marketing campaign by Benetton, which mixes business with socially conscious messages focusing on diversity of all sorts, including color. Those messages are now coming up against growing anti-immigrant realities in Europe, including the dominant presence of the Northern League in the very Italian city where Benetton is headquartered: Treviso. That report airs in early November. About The World Winner of the 2006 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for Broadcast News, The World with anchor Lisa Mullins has been bringing daily international news to local audiences for the past 10 years. Monday through Friday at 4pm on WGBH 89.7, the international staff of The World presents a mix of news, features, interviews, and music from around the globe. The World is the first international radio news program developed specifically for an American audience, giving listeners an upbeat and informed take on the day's events. Co-produced by WGBH, the BBC World Service, and Public Radio International, The World is heard on more than 200 public radio stations across the country. About WGBH Listener-supported WGBH 89.7 is Boston's NPR® arts and culture station. Bringing you the best for more than 50 years, 89.7 serves its wide-ranging audience with a menu of classical music, NPR news, jazz, blues, folk, and spoken-word programs. The station is an active participant in New England's vibrant music community, presenting more than 300 performances every year, including live broadcasts and remote recordings from such diverse venues as Tanglewood, the Lowell Folk Festival, the Newport Jazz Festival, and WGBH's own studios. WGBH 89.7 can be heard online anywhere in the world at www.wgbh.org, and can be heard on Nantucket at WNCK 89.5.

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