A small person's big identity question
Updated: 2014-05-30 07:12
By Erik Nilsson (China Daily)
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I'm not sure who my daughter is. Neither is she.
In a sense, that is. Of course, my wife and I know our nearly 3-year-old better than we know anyone, or anyone knows her. And Lily knows herself best of all.
But we're at a loss in terms of her identity - a question that has only recently started to emerge, as she reaches an age where she understands some distinctions between languages, locations and nationalities.
She knows her nanny is Chinese and her parents are foreign. She previously professed the opposite. Her first words were respectively mama (the same in Chinese and English), baba (daddy) and maomao (kitty). She next mixed languages in every sentence.
Lily now addresses foreigners in English and Chinese people in Putonghua.
But when other tykes call her waiguoren (foreigner), she protests in Chinese: "I'm not a foreigner! I'm Chinese." And when "aunties" - as middle-aged women are often referred to in China - call her yang wawa ("foreign dolly", a term often used for white toddlers since many Chinese girls grew up playing with equally blonde-haired, blue-eyed dolls), she objects in Chinese: "I'm not a foreign doll! I'm Lily."
None of this matters much. At least yet.
We, however, wonder how it will play out when she enters kindergarten in the fall.
Will other kids or teachers treat her differently? If so, how? Her peers with comparable cognizance of identity sometimes point out her foreign status. But it's instantly forgotten when they start, say, dancing together.
Aunties and uncles chase her everywhere, often with a treat or toy and pose for photos.
Will teachers also fawn over, spoil and hold to different standards this girl who speaks Chinese and thinks mostly like a native but bears a conspicuously different visage? Will other kids resent that or reject her because of her appearance?
Will they, seemingly more likely, play with her and consider her a friend who's like, but not really one of them? Or, will nobody think of it after a few seconds since she speaks and acts like anyone else born and raised in Beijing, even when she's an adult?
I have many American-born Chinese friends who've started lives in Beijing to divine their identities. We wonder if Lily might someday do the same in reverse since our family is in China indefinitely.
That said, our ABC friends were considered Americans in that country while growing up. But China is different. It's virtually impossible to "become Chinese." China is typically tolerant of foreigners by virtue of recognizing their different backgrounds according to a relativistic outlook.
While different ethnicities and nationalities may perhaps categorically be considered foreigners, they're essentially accepted in society, yet as such.
Still, foreigners with Chinese characteristics are often most welcomed.
The majority of Americans believe foreigners become American if they're born in the United States or live in the country for a long time and, most importantly, "act American" - whatever that means. This hails from a history as an immigrant nation.
Studies show so-called third-culture kids, raised outside their parents' homelands, are more likely to get along with other third-culture children than with peers from the cultures in which they or their parents grew up.
According to this perspective, Lily and kids like her will be able to better relate to a person raised by a Zambian mother and Columbian father in France than her American cousins or Chinese classmates.
That's not to say she won't get along with anyone from anywhere. The studies simply suggest an affinity constructed by a common third-culture upbringing. And third-culture kinship is just a rule of thumb. In a complex and globalizing world, integration means more third-culture kids.
Ultimately, Lily, China and the world will decide her identity - and that of other children also in her still small but no longer tiny shoes, in a big country in a big world.
erik_nilsson@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 05/30/2014 page20)
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