“There seems to be a mistake here,” the lady at the driver’s license office said.
“What’s wrong?” my wife asked.
“Your son marked that he’s Hispanic.”
“He is. He was born in Argentina. I’m Argentine.”
The lady looked up in surprise, then blurted out, “You don’t look Hispanic.”
For those of you that don’t speak the language, let me translate. The woman meant, “I’m sorry. I’m so ignorant that I think Hispanic means Mexican.” [Interestingly enough, it was 20 years ago when we had our major run-in with cultural ignorance, and it was also at the driver’s license office. But that’s another story.] If you don’t show features that reflect Aztecan or Mayan blood, then you just don’t look Hispanic to people like this lady.
From what I can tell, this problem is bigger in Texas than in other places. But you’d be surprised how many people tell my wife she doesn’t look Argentine. My usual response is, “Have you met a lot of people from Argentina?” Right now, I have the perfect ready examples. There are six Argentines playing in the NBA (at least in 2007-08). Two of them are blond, with German last names (Herrmann, Oberto). The others have Italian last names (Ginobili, Scola, Delfino, Nocioni). And none of them would fit this lady’s view of “Hispanic.” [If you include the other two Argentines that have played in the NBA, you do get Sanchez, which might sound a bit more Hispanic, but you also get Wolkowyski).
Hispanic is an ethnicity, not a race. Hispanics are as culturally diverse as are English speakers around the world. And my two beautiful kids are Hispanic, more so than many, since their great-grandmother was actually born in Spain. A lot of Hispanics can’t claim that.
Texas DPS, isn’t it time you hired some culturally-sensitive people? Nah… why mess with tradition?
Category Archives: Personal
Tagged by Nick Gill
I resisted Nick’s tag a bit, partly because I didn’t want to fall into the stereotypical blog and partly because everyone else’s lists look so erudite compared with mine. But hey, I’ll play the game:
One book that changed your life? {I’ll assume on all of these that the Bible doesn’t count.} He Loves Forever by Tom Olbricht, though it’s more because of the impact that Dr. Olbricht had on my approach to Scripture. The ideas are in the book, but I learned them from him.
One book that you’ve read more than once? Celebration of Discipline by Richard Foster
One book that you’d want on a desert island? An Anthology of English Literature
One book that made you laugh? At Home in Mitford by Jan Karon
One book that made you cry? Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
One book you wish had been written? Everything Jesus Said by Simon Peter, et al
One book you wish had never been written? While some misleading religious books come to mind, I have problems with the idea of needing to silence any expression of ideas. I don’t have anything for this list.
One book you’re currently reading? Juan Antonio Monroy gave me a book he’s written about Frank Pais, an evangelical who was a hero in Castro’s revolution in Cuba. The title is Frank País, Un líder evangélico en la Revolución Cubana
One book you’ve been meaning to read? Jack Reese’s The Body Broken
I’m supposed to tag 5 other bloggers, but I’m doing an intraoffice tag instead. Vince, Steve, Debi, Kay, Lauren, Nic, Courtney, Justin, Skye… you’re it.