New Year Honours 2023: Brian May and Lionesses on list

The Queen guitarist is knighted in a list that also celebrates the Lionesses' Euro 2022 victory.

BBC News

The recent news of Ngozi Fulani’s (CEO and Founder of Sistah Space) treatment at Buckingham Palace has opened up more conversation about simply asking “Where are you ‘really’ from?”.

Why does this question matter?

There is nothing wrong with asking about where you lived or where you grew up, these are normal questions for making connections with people. However, the follow-up question “Where are you ‘really’ from?”, or “You look/sound like you are from X or Y”, trying to satisfy their own assumptions leads to more uncomfortable conversations.

I grew up in the UK and lived in Europe, South East Asia, and Asia. From experience, this question follows you around wherever you go. When I provide a simple answer, “I grew up in the UK”, it never quite satisfies their curiosity according to their own biased judgement. From those who ask, I don’t stereotypically look like someone who should identify as that. They probe further and push me in a position to convince new acquaintances that that’s where I am REALLY from. After numerous microaggressive conversations of the same questions, it gets very exhaustive.

These intrusive questions are often excused as being curious and framed without malicious intent. It can be triggering as it undermines your identity, making you justify your identity, distorting your sense of belonging and making you feel alienated. These unwelcomed conversations have real undertones of racism, anti-minority and anti-immigration, these judgements about someone’s race, ethnicity and nationality can be harmful to the recipient.

The only way we can eliminate unconscious biases is to listen carefully when someone speaks and make meaningful connections. We need to stop profiling someone’s identity based on our own biased judgements. We are all different, no one should be measured and placed neatly in a box!

#WhereAreYouFrom #WhereAreYouReallyFrom
#MicroAggression #StopAsianHate #Identity #NgoziFulani

Where do you really come from? That’s a toxic question.

When a British royal aide asked a Black woman where she was from, she spoke multitudes. Most of them bad.

The Washington Post
Sebastien Bassong, who was born and bred in France, decided to play for the Cameroon national team and explains the agonising decision with a heartwarming anecdote. Upon asking his father which country to play for, he was advised to listen to the national anthems of both and go with the one that stirred his heart. He picked Cameroon. #whereareyoureallyfrom https://www.rashmee.com/2022/12/04/footballers-often-ask-themselves-where-am-i-really-from/
Footballers often ask themselves: Where am I really from? - Rashmee Roshan Lall

The BBC World Service documentary ‘Which country should I play for?’ tells an interesting story about the French Cameroonian professional footballer Sébastien Bassong. Bassong, who was born and bred in France, decided to play for the Cameroon national team and explains the agonising decision with a heartwarming anecdote. Upon asking his father which country to … Continue reading "Footballers often ask themselves: Where am I really from?"

Rashmee Roshan Lall
Great to see journalists calling out on racism behind the question, “Where are you really from?”.
This weeks story with Ngozi Fulani has related to so many who has experienced this form of micro-racism.
#WhereAreYouFrom #WhereAreYouReallyFrom
https://youtu.be/JwjvsqQ9e-Y
Asking white people where they're from

YouTube

I've not seen a single piece of work from Rizwan Ahmed that can be called 'simple' in either content, range, or performance.

He is outstanding in this multi-layered social and cultural commentary film.

Simply stunning work, again.

Mogul Mowgli is superb.

Watch it. 🎞️

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s-hFOqYUgcE

#RizAhmed #MogulMowgli #RizwanAhmed #Film #WhereAreYouReallyFrom

Mogul Mowgli - Official Trailer | Out Now on BFI Streaming (UK)

YouTube
I’m watching the ‘where are you really from’-gate with a lot of interest. I have been asked in various contexts, with various intents for as long as I have lived in the UK. I realise I always will. Most people, even if their intentions are perfectly genuine (healthy curiosity), don’t know how uncomfortable this question can make people feel. It places an identity label on us that we might not be aligned with. No one has to identify with the place they were born in or want to have a conversation about it. Sometimes a simple ‘if you don’t mind me asking’ can make a whole lot of difference. And be prepared to just take ‘it’s complicated’ for an answer and move on #whereareyoufrom #whereareyoureallyfrom
Riz Ahmed - Where You From | The Big Narstie Show

YouTube
The whole "where are you really from" story with the royal family reminds me of this clip from 9 years ago by @KenTanakaLovesU@twitter.com
#whereareyoufrom #whereareyoureallyfrom
https://youtu.be/DWynJkN5HbQ
What kind of Asian are you?

YouTube