I’ve always had trouble knowing where to fit in. I have never known which box I was supposed to climb in or which label to stick on my forehead.
I was born in Surinam, but most of my life I have lived in the Netherlands.
My parents had a strong sense of culture and raised me accordingly.
We lived in a small town in the northern part of Holland that did not have many people of color.
Needless to say, things outside of my home were very different to things inside.
In my home there were loud voices and singing, dancing and vibrant music.
Outside of the home it felt like I needed to be ashamed of my mother’s loud voice,and I tried my best not to speak too loud.
Around my family I felt at home and liked my braids and dark skin.
Outside home, old ladies would sometimes come up to me and touch my ‘strange’ hair, and make me wish my skin wasn’t making it impossible to blend in or disappear.
There was lots of loud laughter in our home. My mother would read Anansi stories and we would laugh hysterically.
Outside of the home, I could not explain to people why any story that starts with: “Dear God, can you make everyone that laughs at someone else drop dead instantly…” is going to be a really funny one.
In Surinam culture it’s very important that children learn to respect their parents and older people. You never talk back, you never raise your voice and you always look down when you are spoken to by an adult.
At school the teacher would say: Look at me when I talk to you!
At home my parents would speak to each other and family members in Sranang tongo, their native tongue. They would speak to us in a mixture of Dutch and Surinamese, we spoke to them in Dutch. With my sisters I spoke in a mixture of Dutch and Surinamese.
At school I spoke Dutch and there were so many things I could not talk about or explain because there was no word for it in Dutch.
At birthdays, we had parties with lots of family and friends coming in from everywhere, staying for dinner and sleeping over. My mother would cook lots of food, aunts would help in the kitchen and the house was filled with all of these wonderful festive smells, and we would eat until we could eat no more.
When I was invited to a party of one of my friends, we sat in a quiet circle with mostly old family members having a polite conversation and we were given a piece of cheese with a little vlag stick (it’s a Dutch thing), everyone left before dinner and there was absolutely no music.
Growing up in these two cultures thought me how to adapt. I learned how to behave and what was expected of me in each situation. And because I was such a people pleaser, by the time I was in my teens, I could blend in anywhere and everywhere. and I knew what was expected of me. I also had lots of interest in different people.
The people I called my friends were a variety of ages, colors, cultures and mixtures and I loved every one of them.
Still, I always felt different.
Where did I fit in?
I’m an adult now. I married a man whose skin color is the exact opposite of mine (no matter how much sun he gets). My children are of mixed culture. Their skin color is a mixture of ours, their hair is mixed, curly but not as curly as mine, dark but not as dark as mine.
My husband sometimes plays his (terrible) Dutch songs and I sing and dance with my children to old Surinam children’s songs. When we celebrate there’s lots of family and lots of food but no music, because my husband says he can’t have a conversation with music in the background. I teach my children to respect their parents and older people, but I also teach them that it’s okay to speak up and look people in the eye.
I mostly speak Dutch, but when emotional I turn to my native tongue, although my kids hardly understand what it is that I’m talking about.
So where do I fit in?
I think here. With my own family a perfect mixture of black and white, Dutch and Surinam, east and west, I fit here.
Do you have a mixture of cultures in your family? How do you adapt?
This is an original post to World Moms Blog by Mirjam of The Netherlands.
Photo credit to the author.
That’s just a very ‘fitting’ end to your story, Mirjam!
I love it!
Although we have a mixed family, I don’t know whether we have different cultures. But I do know I try to teach my Ethiopian daughter to lessen the drama and the noise.Maybe I should just let her be who she is. She can choose later on whether she wants to blend in or not! Thanks for that message!
Oh and about “I mostly speak Dutch, but when emotional I turn to my native tongue, although my kids hardly understand what it is that I’m talking about.”: Well, when I’m emotional, I just speak flemish, but my kids won’t understand me either (or they will act like they don’t) 😉
This is such a beautiful post and I relate in similar but different ways.
Born in England, raised in South Africa and now 20 years in America – it is all different. I have two daughters, different colors, different hair … different personalities – by far.
And now a single mom, not fitting with the couples, not really sure where I fit. or where I want to live.
Thank you for your beautiful words – you sound like you are home.
What a fascinating post! Our family is very homogenous, so I loved hearing how you have blended cultures. The photo for the post is just wonderful too. Thank you for sharing!
This is such a beautiful post, I love the mixture of cultures and the way it forces kids to explore different ways of life. Our nuclear family is a mix of our cultural histories and I love my kids learning about both their Jewish roots and Turkish Muslim roots, and hope it sends them into the world open to accepting differences and appreciating the beautiful tapestry that it creates in our world.
I really loved this post Mirjam, and I totally relate in the sense of not fitting in – even though my story is different.
My parents emigrated to South Africa (from Italy) when I was 8 years old. Back then South Africa had 2 official languages (now we have 11) and I neither spoke not understood either of them! I was sent to school with a pocket dictionary as my only “help” in trying to make sense of things. On top of that I had a very strained relationship with my parents (but *that* is a whole *other* story). Kids are amazingly resilient, though and (by the end of my first school year) I had learnt enough to pass both English and Afrikaans.
37 years later I’m still living in Cape Town. I actually managed to find and marry another Italian who had grown up here (his parents emigrated when he was 5)! I couldn’t have found a more perfect fit if I’d tried. I think we’re still more Italian than South African, however (since we both grew up here) we find it easier to speak English than Italian (even though we’re both still fluent in it). Although both my children were born in Cape Town, they also strongly identify with their Italian heritage. 🙂
That said, I could not live in Italy again. I’ve been SO spoiled by the natural beauty and open spaces of Cape Town, not to mention its notoriously “laid back” vibe. 🙂
I love this post Mirjam! I too grew up similarly. My mother French and my father Turkish and both had lived in Israel, so they considered themselves Israeli and spoke (and still speak) Hebrew to each other. Our food was all the typical middle-eastern food. We were always loud (and when my mother re-married an Italian, that didn’t change). Food (lots of it – always fresh and homemade) was always so important in our family and we always had our meals together as a family. Growing up in the US, my American freinds had dinner on their own, or in front if the tv and usually it was not a huge selection/variety of foods on the table. Both my husband and brother-in-law (both Americans) have commented about how loud we are as a family and how much time we spend preparing and eating in our family. Now that I am a mother, I have taught my children my first language of French (although they answer back in English), and I have set “house rules” about eating together every night. I have accepted some American customs though, especially since I work long hours, around what and how much food I serve…such as last night we ordered in a pizza – and that was OK, because I didn’t get home until 7:30 and we still all ate together. 🙂