Mixed race children celebrate their ‘cultural cocktail’ heritagePosted in Africa, Articles, Census/Demographics, Media Archive, South Africa on 2016-09-30 19:23Z by Steven |
Mixed race children celebrate their ‘cultural cocktail’ heritage
Times Live
Johannesburg, South Africa
2016-09-23
Nomahlubi Jordaan, Courts and Law Reporter
Food‚ language and tradition of diverse cultures are the essence of the heritage of children born from multiracial families.
Mark Andrew Sunners‚ a hip hop producer‚ was born in Liverpool in England from a white English father and Xhosa mother from Grahamstown. He was raised in Gaborone in Botswana.
He describes himself as “a bit of a cultural cocktail”.
“I follow both sides. When my mother was still alive I would go to umgidi [traditional celebration of a rite of passage] and imisebenzi [traditional ceremonies] with her as often as she asked. I do from time to time now‚ but definitely not as often.
As a “multicultural” Sunners says he celebrates “typical Western holidays”‚ “but I don’t celebrate a lot of my Xhosa practices as much as I did growing up”.
“I don’t feel I belong to just one culture because I don’t. I belong to both. It is difficult to celebrate Heritage Day purely from a Xhosa or from an English perspective.
“I celebrate Heritage Day with those who mean the most to me‚ family and friends alike. We are all South African‚” says Sunners.
Born from a Xhosa father and English South African mother‚ Cayla Zukiswa Jack‚ 20‚ a University of Cape Town student‚ says a mixed race woman she prefers being in a “diverse” atmosphere.
“That is where I feel comfortable.”…
Read the entire article here.