In 1930, our ethnicity changed!

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  • Опубліковано 19 жов 2022
  • #ancestry #documentary #genealogy #louisiana #creole #familytreehistory #findingyourroots #heritage #indigenous #familyhistory #genealogy #dnasecrets
    native ancestry dna test
    My great grandmother Lola tried to pass for white, but now we are starting to piece together the truth about her Creole and Native American roots and find our family history.
    In Episode 1, I explore what we were told in NY regarding our Louisiana heritage and genealogy.
    Discover how to leave a meaningful legacy with our "Be a Good Ancestor" course. Learn valuable techniques and insights to preserve and share your family's stories for generations to come. Grab yours now at www.nytonashville.com and embark on a transformative journey of preserving your family's history!
    Want to support this project? / about
    Grab your own Ancestry DNA test now! : amzn.to/3UxGKJx
    Want to rewatch any of "Finding Lola"? Here's the series:
    Watch the Episode 1 that started the whole journey:
    • In 1930, our ethnicity...
    Watch Episode 2 here:
    • Our ancestry was hidde...
    Watch Episode 3 here:
    • I learned why my famil...
    Watch Episode 4 here:
    • Is my ancestry journey...
    --------
    Come join me on a new docu-series that explores identity, racial tensions in the South during the 20th century, DNA secrets and the unique experiences of those who historically called Louisiana home.
    My name is Danielle Romero, and all my life, I have romanticized Louisiana.
    Growing up in New York, it represented a place where I could step back the sepia-toned life of my great grandmother, Lola Perot, who died before I was born.
    Now, it was time to go back to Louisiana--although I had no idea what the truth would be or what questions to ask---who was Lola really? Who were we?
    Amazon links are affiliate links. If buy something through these links, we may earn affiliate commission. Thank you for supporting this project!
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  • @marathongirl27
    @marathongirl27 Рік тому +465

    I am African American and my paternal great grandmother was biracial (blk/white). She looked like a white woman, fair skin, blue eyes, straight hair and spoke like a southern black woman. Born in 1903, she could have easily passed as a white woman. I’m so proud she did not and instead graduated from a historically black college, Grambling University in the 1920s. She passed away at 103 yrs old.

    • @jacquelynharper3659
      @jacquelynharper3659 11 місяців тому +13

      My grandmother was bi racial, too half black/ half Irish and was born in NC

    • @feliciafriend3954
      @feliciafriend3954 11 місяців тому +16

      That’s a incredible story, I’m glad she embraced her whole identity. I’m curious though in those days in which inter-racial relations was illegal did she ever talk about the story of her parents coming together?

    • @celticmulato2609
      @celticmulato2609 9 місяців тому

      @feliciafriend3954 Her whole identity??? That woman was most likely a Quadroon( 1/4 black) to pass as fully White. She would have fit in more at a White University than Black if she spoke proper English than slave or bad English; you know she stood out among the Black students!

    • @gilmoremccoy6930
      @gilmoremccoy6930 8 місяців тому +1

      You mean pass as 100% white. DNA don't lie. At best she was Mixed Race!

    • @MsLady9991
      @MsLady9991 7 місяців тому +13

      My grandmother is the same.. Blackfoot/black/Jewish… and completely embraced being a black woman!!🙏🏼❤️🙌

  • @jaelzion
    @jaelzion Рік тому +393

    My GrandDad didn't deliberately pass for white, but he was sometimes mistaken for white. There was a little hotel in Texas where GrandDad stayed whenever he passed through there (circa 1939). There were no issues until on one trip, he brought my Dad with him. My Dad was brown-skinned and obviously African-American. The proprietor of the hotel asked GrandDad "Who's this you got with you?" GrandDad said "This is my younger boy" and gave him my Dad's name. The hotel owner was mortified. He told my GrandDad "Reverend, I had no idea. I can't let you stay in my hotel, the Klan would burn it down. But I'll tell you what, you can stay in the guest room of my house." So my father and grandfather did exactly that, they stayed in his guest room that night and moved on the next morning. GrandDad never stopped at that hotel again.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +17

      This made me so sad. I think you would enjoy watching episode 3 about my Louisiana family's experience. It was really hard to edit that video, I was so upset. Such a similar story. Episode 3: ua-cam.com/video/bLxaTBhCu_Y/v-deo.html

    • @BORN-to-Run
      @BORN-to-Run Рік тому +16

      Just look how darker skinned Black women treat lighter-skinned Mixed-race women especially simply because they are not really Black, AND because they received preferential treatment by Black men and in society in general.
      Their day for RE-unification is in progress.
      They deserve it.

    • @KB-un3bt
      @KB-un3bt Рік тому +45

      @@BORN-to-Run I could easily generalize my experiences and say ALL light-skin mixed race females have treated me horribly including my own mother, but my grandmother who was also a light skin Creole woman was the most wonderful human to ever live. Stop generalizing billions of dark skin Black ladies. You are apart of the problem.

    • @sandrawilkins490
      @sandrawilkins490 Рік тому +9

      I'm from south Louisiana, and know many Creole people who look like, and can pass for white. There are pockets of Creoles all over Louisiana, especially in Natchitoches. Has any ever heard of the Cane River Creoles ? It's funny that none of them mentioned it. My grandmother on both sides of my family were Mullatto. There is lots of mixture in Louisiana. My family never thought it was anything strange.

    • @stricknine8623
      @stricknine8623 Рік тому +1

      Smh,..If you are "mistaken" for White,...Its because you ARE White or you are predominantly White, at the very least.
      People are soo dim !!

  • @BESTILL-bu6jw
    @BESTILL-bu6jw Рік тому +1043

    My mother is from Louisiana and now deceased but she always told me some of our relatives and family friends passed for white back in the 20s, 30s, and 40s in order to get jobs and live better lives and avoid racism. My mother was very fair skinned as were some of her siblings. I am proud to say my mother never denied being a black woman despite the racism she endured during that time. She was always true to herself!!

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +74

      What a heartbreaking time in our history. Not that it's perfect now... and I think spending more time on that era would help us all so much. Im happy for you that you were able to have your heritage passed down to you-- a gift.

    • @rosahacketts1668
      @rosahacketts1668 Рік тому +45

      So good to read that she never denied who she was despite the racism she endured. Wonderful.❤

    • @investirenafriquedepuisloccide
      @investirenafriquedepuisloccide Рік тому +7

      Beautifull to Heard it.

    • @deloresbrooks7092
      @deloresbrooks7092 Рік тому +6

      Good thank goodness...

    • @bonnienero9415
      @bonnienero9415 Рік тому +23

      people in Louisiana are gorgeous!

  • @NOTIME4THIS
    @NOTIME4THIS Рік тому +503

    This is why my mom used to tell white people you are not as white as you think you are, I always thought that was a strange saying but now I truly understand. Because of racism has caused Black people so much in terms of the loss of family connections and generational hurt that when they find out the truth it is devastating sometimes so much so that white people do not want to be black they deny that part is who they are and it’s sad because do not live in their authentic life.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +30

      Thank you for watching sharing that--it's a good point. I also think it's a strange idea....if you are raised white and you look white and you're mostly white....but your recent family members were not white....something Im thinking about for a future video. I appreciate you taking the time to comment that.

    • @purplelove3666
      @purplelove3666 Рік тому

      A white person can't be black,so what you said did not make any sense, even if they have 29 percent of black,they are still not black,

    • @p.gizzle90
      @p.gizzle90 Рік тому +10

      My gmas use to say this all the time too.

    • @mrswilbert
      @mrswilbert Рік тому +3

      I know I am.

    • @lapislazulii141
      @lapislazulii141 Рік тому

      Having SOME West A. Admix does NOT mean you are not “White”.

  • @anitachin596
    @anitachin596 Рік тому +882

    It wasn’t about being ashamed, more about survival. It’s difficult to judge the past.

    • @montprice6722
      @montprice6722 Рік тому +73

      most cases it's both!

    • @GodsChild1159
      @GodsChild1159 Рік тому +90

      @@montprice6722 No it’s not both because if blacks were treated equally they would not have passed.

    • @Bhappi137
      @Bhappi137 Рік тому +9

      @@Renee1983 thats so sad , I grew up in a white girl in a white neighbourhood and I always admired dark brown eyes and rich dark black / brown hair I wished I had dark hair and all my life I’ve dyed my hair very dark I , My Daughter married a Burmese boy and now have a gorgeous dark haired dark boy and he’s the apple of my eye , @Dream Lover there are so many people like me who love dark beauty ❤

    • @man4522
      @man4522 Рік тому +67

      My great grandmother was so light that she could’ve passed for yt but chose not to . She went to Fort Valley and was one of the 1st Black teachers n Atlanta. I’m saying this to say that it was a choice

    • @originaleverythingelseisca5977
      @originaleverythingelseisca5977 Рік тому +3

      Exactly

  • @toyasmith5676
    @toyasmith5676 Рік тому +211

    This is the story of a lot of Creole people, including mine. You have to imagine how hard it had to have been to survive Jim Crow.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +19

      Toya-- YES. Exactly. Those were incredibly hard and evil times. Doesnt mean things are perfect now...but wow...the reality of Jim Crow

    • @denisehenry3427
      @denisehenry3427 Рік тому +10

      My family lived it. I don't have to imagine it. Thank God we made it through the worst time, Some people are trying to turn back the hands of time. I keep informed on what's on the horizon, because God is still in control.

    • @pierrerochon7271
      @pierrerochon7271 9 місяців тому

      DAMN DENISE- MARRY ME- HEHE YOUR INSIGHT MOVES ME -TOTHE AIRPORT- HAHA

    • @LearnIt.KnowIt.LiveIt.
      @LearnIt.KnowIt.LiveIt. 6 місяців тому

      My grandfather lived it. Born in Oklahoma in a Mexican family.
      I saw the actual sign in the Smithsonian in DC [ no blacks, no dogs, and no Mexicans.]

  • @katrinaf.6622
    @katrinaf.6622 Рік тому +402

    I had distant relatives during slavery who were freed, pass for white and bought their still enslaved darker skinned relatives. It was a very interesting story my aunt told us about. People did what they had to do, to survive. I also have relatives that could pass for white, but never did. They would tell me things that white people would say about black people, thinking they were white too. And when they would tell them that they were black, they wouldn't believe them.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +56

      Katrina- wow! My family has the same story about relatives buying enslaved relatives. I just located all of the information recently. Blew me away. I plan to share it on here soon

    • @KAM-ew7jh
      @KAM-ew7jh Рік тому +7

      Awesome!! .Good for them!!!👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @Niccole-oq8wo
      @Niccole-oq8wo Рік тому +34

      My great aunt told me similar stories. She could pass. You'd never know. She worked as a maid in many "wealthy" homes. She told me the things that were told to her were sickening. It was hard for her to look some of these people in the eye. She told that she always made it a point to tell them her race when it was her last day. She said the look on their faces was absolutely priceless. One of them apologized to her!

    • @MoniMeka
      @MoniMeka Рік тому +2

      Could you go into more detail about your p adding relatives buying your darker Skinner relatives? It's interesting. I want to know more! How did they try them? Why did they buy them?

    • @MoniMeka
      @MoniMeka Рік тому +2

      @@Niccole-oq8wo wow!

  • @heathermorrison1674
    @heathermorrison1674 Рік тому +336

    I am a white woman and my brother and I got dna tests and uncovered a small amount of African descent. The test gave us a timeline for the ancestor that meant someone way back when must have passed as white at least publicly. Our family also had an old tale of having Native American blood way back and I have seen others with that tale who had the same hidden African ancestor. I suppose that was a safer claim that could give reason for certain physical traits and I suspect many people who have that Native American ancestor claim might find an African ancestor if they do a DNA test. I don't at all claim to be black--I am a very pale redhead--but I think it points to an American history tale that hasn't been taught to us correctly.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +26

      Heather, I am so glad you found the channel! You are right, there is an American history that we re missing-- and its OUR history. The history of many many descendants of people of color whose history has been lost for too long. I hope you stay around!

    • @LookinAtHim
      @LookinAtHim Рік тому +61

      This is true of many black people also, who believe they have Native American heritage but actually have significant white ancestry and little to no Native. We are often told "we got Indian in our family" to explain lighter skinned cousins or relatives with unusual hair types

    • @grantbos5967
      @grantbos5967 Рік тому +7

      Heather your grandma L is the half sister of my grandma A. Our great grandma AW came from Louisiana. Our great great grandma L shares the same first name of your grandma L. She passed away in Albany, Ca. in the late 1930s without ever knowing her grandchildren nor they about her. On the Death Certificate she's listed mulatto. I'm in Sac area you have my name.

    • @drpreatorius
      @drpreatorius Рік тому +38

      So many people claim Indian heritage only to find an African in their past instead.

    • @heathermorrison1674
      @heathermorrison1674 Рік тому +4

      @@grantbos5967 yeah, no idea what you're talking about. You have the wrong person.

  • @peaceminded5512
    @peaceminded5512 Рік тому +164

    Every black family has a story about a family member who tried to pass whether it was successful or unsuccessful. This is interesting. Sad that she felt she didn’t have a choice, but joyful because you are finding your roots in a safe space.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +6

      What a kind word, thank you. I feel that this journey is exactly what I was meant to do. Glad you are here!

    • @itsniquenique45
      @itsniquenique45 Рік тому +11

      Not Caribbean people lol. This is a uniquely American phenomenon, that’s why is so interesting because there are so many yt people with racialized ancestors that they don’t know about.

    • @nicbocci1694
      @nicbocci1694 Рік тому +3

      My Grandmother on my Mother's side passed. Although unintentional, it allowed her a means to provide better for her family. As others have previously mentioned, it meant survival in a hot, racially divided era.

    • @tennisstar2011
      @tennisstar2011 Рік тому +7

      Not true at all. As someone who comes from a long line of beautiful darkskinned people this is not my family’s story at all. Although very interesting, this is not every black families story.

    • @DeLaTr0ll
      @DeLaTr0ll Рік тому +6

      The ones that did “pass” disappeared. We have a whole line that vanished but due to the phenotypes the other siblings had I’m sure that aunt probably live another life as a non black woman.

  • @korrinarobinson1805
    @korrinarobinson1805 Рік тому +92

    This happened in our family, my great grandmother was born on a reservation in grande ronde Oregon, left at an early age, didn’t tell anyone about her Native American heritage and because of how light her skin was( even though she was 100% blood quantum), she could pass as Caucasian. My grandmother’s sisters and brothers did a genealogy and we found out we were Native American and belonged to the confederated tribes of grande ronde, and were kalapuyan , this was in 1998, after her passing. Our family wrote a book to chronicle our ancestors all the way back to the the 1600’s, so that we will always have our history and we continue to add to it.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +11

      Korrina- what a beautiful way to honor her story! You are a kindred for sure haha. How did you figure out the tribe? Just by her brith records?

  • @LCCreole
    @LCCreole Рік тому +104

    These stories are so common in the creole community, even so in my own family

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +9

      That is bittersweet to hear. I’m glad to know the experience can be shared outside of our family to help give it context…but how heartbreaking for our families and so many others that this was their “normal. Thank you for sharing that and coming along on this journey!

    • @GeeBee212
      @GeeBee212 Рік тому +12

      I have a similar story in my family. A Creole woman named Lula, my greatgrandmother's sister, ran off to California and became Lola! She said that she was Portuguese. Married a man of European descent, had children and never told them. Everyone in our family couldn't pass and most of those who could chose not to do so. Many times when these stories are told, it's with the "tragic mulatto" trope. You told your family story wonderfully. I look "mixed" but I identify as Black because that's the culture that nurtured me. Everyone has to find their place and their identity but I think that we owe our children the truth about what makes them, them. Lula/Lola's descendants are now finding out who their ancestors were as we all connect on genetic genealogy sites. The truth is in our blood.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +7

      @@GeeBee212 this story really resonated with me, thank you for taking the time to comment. Is the "tragic mulatto" thing a reference to something I missed? Please fill me in! Also, I love what you said about identifying with the culture that nurtured you. I dont know if you saw episode 4 yet (just came out this morning) but it's basically....reflecting on how we all approach our identity differently, even in the same family. Im not sure how I would "identify" but I am proud now to know my heritage. And now my kids will know it too. Time to break the cycle.

    • @sammiesmith6690
      @sammiesmith6690 Рік тому +3

      @@nytn Another group of Creole people are the Cane River there in Louisiana.

    • @lamariposanegra_
      @lamariposanegra_ Рік тому +3

      @@nytn here in south Louisiana the word "mulatto" is like taboo, some accept it most don't. My Maw-Maw hated that word because she said it was everyone else's way of being disrespectful because they knew that you were of mixed lineage and could pass if you wanted to. Needless to say that's another reason why some families were divided because some felt as if the others thought they were better than them based upon their complexion. When actually they all just wanted to be comfortable in their own skin.

  • @locksmithhelpdeskgmail
    @locksmithhelpdeskgmail Рік тому +94

    My mother did. You could never tell by her kids. We're all 'white'. I asked her before she passed away since I knew the truth, she wouldn't talk about it but never denied it.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +26

      One of the biggest takeaways for me on this journey-- you never know what you don't know about someone. Thank you so much for watching and sharing that. Makes me feel less alone!

    • @LookinAtHim
      @LookinAtHim Рік тому

      You don't have to put "white" in quotes lol. If your mom was white enough to pass and she had kids with a white man, you are unequivocally "white." We don't use the racist one drop rule anymore lol

    • @peachygal4153
      @peachygal4153 Рік тому +2

      @@nytn You should read White Like Her, by Gail Lusaik. Her mothers' story is very similar to your great grandmother's. Gail is in her 70's now. Her parents met in southern Mississippi during WWII at an army camp close to New Orleans which was just over the state line. They married in Indiana. Gail believes her father never knew her mother was mix race because he was very prejudiced. I think Gail's mom chose to marry in Indiana because she knew Jim Crows laws would make their marriage invalid if they married in the south. Gail's mother's parent's divorced when she was little, and she was raised by her maternal grandmother. the grandmother had died by the time Gail's parents met so it made it easy for her mother to have a lack of family she did not have to explain away. After doing research, Gail found a half uncle from her father who remarried. His daughter, Stefanie Fredericks, also produces documentaries and she hopes to do a movie or miniseries on Gail's mother. She may would be interested in your story too.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +4

      @@peachygal4153 The marriage license... wow. I have never been able to find the marriage license between Lola and her irish husband. They were supposedly married in 1925 in Louisiana. I wonder if it was a "legal" marriage or one of the heart...

  • @msneke1
    @msneke1 Рік тому +111

    A lot of biracial and fair skinned Black folk “passed” as white because passing made their lives easier; especially during a time when being Black in America and anywhere else in the world was extremely difficult due to racism, classism, discrimination, and prejudices. As far as Ms. Lola not telling the truth about her age, it must be a Southern thing because my grandma made herself younger to; and she went by another name…lol. Thanks for sharing!❤

    • @missamerica2694
      @missamerica2694 Рік тому +9

      Most of these ppl were biracial and mixed race NOT fair skinned black ppl; there is a big difference. Allow ppl to be who and what they are.

    • @msneke1
      @msneke1 Рік тому +29

      @@missamerica2694 I was talking about “passing”. It doesn’t matter if they were biracial or light skinned, fair skinned Black folk. They were “passing”. Back then, White people considered anyone with even one drop of African blood ( 1/8th rule) Black, Colored, Negro, Mulatto; and you could look white as snow. They are some light skinned Black folk that look as if they could be White. I don’t know what you were trying fished out of my comment, but My comment cannot stop someone from being who they are nor am I.

    • @chuckbeedle1983
      @chuckbeedle1983 Рік тому +1

      thanks for clearing this up. I couldnt figure out what she had done. Thats aweful that she felt she had to do this and carry it with her even to the end.

    • @TDS927
      @TDS927 Рік тому +2

      @@chuckbeedle1983 Thank you for getting her all the way together. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @prim.an.propher1505
      @prim.an.propher1505 Рік тому +4

      Many of our grandparents from that time were born by midwives at home. Once they had to register for vital records the information can get distorted. Plus the clerks weren’t too concerned with accuracy. My aunt was supposed to be Karon and the nurse wrote Carol so that’s her name

  • @randallland6739
    @randallland6739 Рік тому +680

    So many families did this. There are so many white black people/ creoles that stayed in Louisiana. They passed for better jobs to live better. It was hard in those days being black and a person of color. She is not the only one that did this. I understand why they all did it.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +43

      I am so surprised to see this as common as it is. Up in NY, we really had no idea---I always thought my family was weird about our lineage but chalked it up to "some families don't care". I look back at my family and the stories I DID hear, and now things make more sense. I wish I had known sooner.

    • @randallland6739
      @randallland6739 Рік тому +32

      @@nytn I bet it is a shock, I am proud of y'all for doing this. Y'all please write a book.I am from Louisiana and know your family very well.We were told why many went off and passed. Some of the ones that passed would go off and do well, but secretly help the darker cousins to do better in life. I even have some old pictures.You all have a lot of cousins in Natchitoches black, white, and creole. I descend from the Metoyer, Labaume, De La Baume family from Campti Some of your cousins have formed two different Indian tribes.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +15

      thank you for commenting and for your kind words! I’ve been asking family to write the book!
      I have lots of Metoyer ancestors so we must be cousins. :) I know about the Indian tribes- but I’m not enrolled anywhere-still very much on the journey of figuring out who we are:)

    • @randallland6739
      @randallland6739 Рік тому +9

      @@nytn You are welcome. I am sure we are related. I will post some pics.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +6

      that would be amazing!

  • @mjjeely
    @mjjeely Рік тому +59

    My paternal grandmother is very fair skinned with a sandy blonde hair color. I remember her telling me that when she was a kid people told her should could pass for white if her hair wasn’t so nappy. I’ve seen pictures of her as a toddler with a press and curl and she said she had been getting her hair straightened since she was 2. I guess we got lucky that she never had a desire to pass and that negative comments about skin color was never a thing in my family. I think she mainly didn’t want to pass out of fear of getting caught. I know that I’ve heard a story about her aunt being murdered and I think they played a part in her decision too. I recently found out that my grand father was actually Native American. My grandmother will be 91 in January and I hate that my generation just doesn’t know enough about her or her deceased husband. For her birthday my aunts and uncles talked a lot about their upbringing traveling down south to Mobile, things that they didn’t keep tradition when my generation came around. I would like to get those stories from her before it’s too late. It’s a very strange world we live in and no one is 100% of anything.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      Yes-- get those stories!! That is a gift to them, to you, and future generations. I regret so much not doing this sooner. And you are right----we are mostly all a mix and related more than we think

    • @znayJ
      @znayJ Рік тому +2

      Please video tape her stories immediately b4 it's 2 late🙏🏽 life is short

    • @fungi42021
      @fungi42021 11 місяців тому

      ​@@spiveyporkchop7841😮

    • @sherei9530
      @sherei9530 8 місяців тому +1

      Some had to completely distance from family. If they passed away before getting back home then their offspring may never know their true race. I believe that is the circumstance of many Americans. Even very racist folk

  • @lf1496
    @lf1496 Рік тому +497

    I'm Afro Cuban Afro Puerto Rican. This idea of passing, being ASHAMED of African heritage is strange to me. It's interesting that all the family keeps leaning on her being "Indian" when really the issue is her African heritage. From what you showed her census records listed her as "mulatto." That is a term I'm very familiar with because in Latin America that is what I'm called mulata, which mean African and European mixture not Indian. I'm really glad I am Latin America because with all of our problems, we embrace our African roots. We literally venerate our African ancestors in our religion, no matter how whyt our skin is, Brazilians, Cubans Puerto Ricans etc. lift up our African ancestors. Africa is the source of our music, foods, language, religions and beautiful sensual looks in every shade. America is an odd place, encouraging its people to deny the blood of the very people who gave all humans their humanity. I was raised in the Bronx but live in Rome now. I'm lucky to travel to Africa often, seeing the beautiful place that my ancestors came from. Watching your family members skirt around the word AFRICAN was odd from my perspective. I feel sorry for them it's like a self imposed prison, not accepting the richness of who you are because their country is built off of an illusion of whyt supremacy. Watching this as someone who comes from a culture blessed by an African identity, I am struck by the power of cultural hegemony. You can tell people a lie and after a while they will accept it as truth. Your people really believe Blackness is a source of shame wow 😳

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +68

      Thank you so much for watching and taking the time to reply. Some of her census records show her as Mexican because her mother's family came from the missions--I only showed one record, but she was mostly listed as Mulatto. I dont think anyone in my family is not accepting who we are...but honestly, we were raised white and look white now. Im not sure how much we really SHOULD be claiming. That's hard to figure out--claiming to be Black might do just as much damage in some ways. Im still wondering what to do about it.

    • @sweetjane7375
      @sweetjane7375 Рік тому +2

      Stop the cap. Twenty years ago so called afro-latinos were running around with "Me no black."
      If blackness was so accepted in Latin America, "sube la raza" wouldn't be thing.

    • @rosahacketts1668
      @rosahacketts1668 Рік тому +54

      It is strange to me too the idea of passing, being ashamed of African heritage. Very odd.

    • @rosahacketts1668
      @rosahacketts1668 Рік тому +7

      @@nytn Well, you are white with some Native American ancestry.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +15

      @@rosahacketts1668 that is true. Lola's maternal line were natives that were converted in the mexican missions. But Im white

  • @teddydavis2339
    @teddydavis2339 Рік тому +45

    Who blames her? This world operates on a caste system. Even people of color partake, even if they don't realize it. The Europeans have done a lot of harm to the entire world. I personally love melanated skin.

    • @whitneyangelie3682
      @whitneyangelie3682 Рік тому +2

      It’s not just the Europeans tho… Asian countries are the same way and have been way before any European influence came their way. Back in the old days if you had darker skin it meant you worked all day in the sun and were poor. The wealthy could stay out of the sun and thus lighter skin was seen as better, prettier and more desirable. It’s a world wide idea, mostly for that reason.

    • @nancybreaux9684
      @nancybreaux9684 Рік тому +2

      Facts.

    • @whitneyangelie3682
      @whitneyangelie3682 Рік тому +3

      @@augustusb3501 Lol idk if you’re joking or not, but history says otherwise.

    • @TDS927
      @TDS927 Рік тому +1

      💯

    • @R-DinHo
      @R-DinHo Рік тому

      Why what's the big deal?

  • @Del9-504
    @Del9-504 Рік тому +38

    8th-Generation New Orleanian here and yes this has happened in many families in Louisiana and along the Gulf Coast (Many people don’t know that Mobile was actually the first major French settlement on the coast but they had a conflict local Native America tribes and a lot of people moved to New Orleans after that). Creole culture has always been very hush hush. Names stick out and people want to make sure you are not putting family through the mud. Speaking on passing is apart of this. Passing allowed people to move freely outside of the rigid three-tier hierarchy we had here. They could move to other states and go to any college, be businessman/ seek career advancement and create families in ways not even imaginable in Louisiana. As a proud Black man it created some internal tension at first but at this point I don’t blame them. I will say it does create a very fractured family tree though. I hope everyone can reconnect the dots like I was able to in college. The love I have for all of my family is immense and one day I will meet some of them to chronicle these stories for future generations. So if you know any Delpit’s, Baham’s or Heisser’s holla at me. Thank you for sharing this!

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      Mervin, thank you for taking the time to comment. I love the Louisiana perspective especially. You are right about the fractured family tree, I am determined to piece my family story back together. I'll keep my eye out for those last names. There's a FANTASTIC SW Creole Facebook group Im a part of, mods are amazing. You should look it up and join us!

  • @nytn
    @nytn  Рік тому +2

    🟢
    Watch the other episodes:ua-cam.com/play/PLvzaW1c7S5hQcox9CjaJWA7QKTYXw9Zn2.html
    🟢 Send me a coffee!:
    ko-fi.com/nytn13#linkModal
    ⚪Support more storytelling and get behind the scenes videos: www.patreon.com/NYTN/about
    🟢Watch the docu-series "Finding Lola" : ua-cam.com/play/PLvzaW1c7S5hQcox9CjaJWA7QKTYXw9Zn2.html
    ⚪Want to connect? facebook.com/findinglolafilm/
    🟢Want to know more? www.findinglolafilm.com
    Grab your own Ancestry DNA test now*! : amzn.to/3UxGKJx

  • @blasialuv8439
    @blasialuv8439 Рік тому +37

    I’m Afro American and Vietnamese. I was adopted by loving white adopted parents. I’m fair complexion. I get mistaken for white or eurasian. I’m not trying to pass. I’m Afro Asian, or Blasian. I would never want to pass for white. I love my mix.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      I love seeing people knowing who they are! So beautiful. Glad you are here

    • @lovejones2179
      @lovejones2179 Рік тому

      That’s a very nice mix

    • @christinagraham2915
      @christinagraham2915 Рік тому

      U don't have to shug they did

  • @melodyindigo550
    @melodyindigo550 Рік тому +17

    You are creative as hell for making this a UA-cam channel dedicated to this 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +3

      LOL well that is freaking awesome. Thanks. I care a lot about it-- I just didnt know so many other people did too.

  • @tanyanike
    @tanyanike Рік тому +33

    It seems like many of the family still had a hard time mentioning the black part of their heitage.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +10

      Thank you for this comment--made me think. It wasn’t mentioned in these episodes but Lola’s fathers line comes from slaves. Her mother side was native. I may do an episode on that later. I think African Americans in the south went through so much- I can only speak for myself but I’m not totally sure how to fold in that identity when I was shielded from so much. And I doubt most people would think we were part Black. This is something I’m still trying to balance- honoring our ancestors without claiming a bunch of things that don’t really belong to me.

    • @jaiyabyrd4177
      @jaiyabyrd4177 Рік тому +7

      @@nytn
      Hello
      May I add that on many more occasions than truly apply, BLACK Americans have claimed Native ancestry when in fact it wasn't true.
      The admixture oftentimes was someone white.
      .i e.. French, Spanish or Jewish.
      I'm a Black American who knows our history very very well.
      I wish you the best and be braced for the truth.

    • @lizabetx483
      @lizabetx483 Рік тому +8

      Most relative kept saying Indian. But the term Mulatto clearly explains her background.

    • @lizabetx483
      @lizabetx483 Рік тому +5

      @@jaiyabyrd4177 The racial mixture within the Creole community in Louisiana often includes Native American. Each family of course would have their own unique mix. DNA tests are an option to reveal hidden family history.

    • @jaiyabyrd4177
      @jaiyabyrd4177 Рік тому +3

      @@lizabetx483
      I totally agree 💯
      Mulatto is half white half Black.
      But this still has been so interesting and kinda scary

  • @scottie1009
    @scottie1009 Рік тому +75

    My husband’s great grandmother also denied her Native American background as it was frowned upon to be Indian back in the day. It shows through in all her kids, grandkids and great grandkids! We are so proud of that bloodline!!

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +6

      Im so glad that the family was able to find out who they were and reclaim that identity. Reclaiming our history is incredibly healing. I am still on that journey. Thank you for sharing :) :)

    • @dila4834
      @dila4834 Рік тому +1

      @@nytn With all due respect you look more Hispanic and indian.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      @@dila4834 I keep hearing that! I feel more comfortable identifying that way because I thought it was more obvious

    • @dila4834
      @dila4834 Рік тому +2

      @@nytn You are a beautiful lady however you identify yourself.

  • @allicmw557
    @allicmw557 Рік тому +34

    I encourage everyone to look at those old family records. It's definitely an interesting topic and interesting to find your roots. I found out that my step-grandfather, who was basically my main grandfather, lived as a white man for 30 years in New York then returned to being Black again. He married, had kids, and lived as a white doctor. He was able to do this as he completed medical school in Europe then returned "a new man". Eventually, his wife died, and he married a black woman and moved to California. He was just doing his thing. He did have a French mother from France, which I did not know at all. He never said! Also, he was not from Louisiana but Washington State. I did find many relatives moving on from Louisiana on my dad's side to pass, but this one floored me because I knew him, and he lived with my even more white-presenting grandmother my whole childhood. She would never fully pass, but she did do it a bit to go to whites-only clubs or shops or sit in front on public transport if she wanted. She never lied on the census or left her family. But I do understand why they did this sometimes. The world was very harsh then.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      Alli, this was such a thoughtful reply. Im so thankful you took the time. The world was so harsh. People will always try to survive and protect their family and I dont think I can blame them for doing however they needed to

    • @daisychain3007
      @daisychain3007 Рік тому

      With all due respect, allicm, your post confuses me.
      How could you step-grandfather pass as a white person in one place and as a black one in another? I understand that the world was harsh then (it still is, sometimes) but, surely, anyone could tell what he was just by looking at him.
      How did your grandmother manage to survive as a white-presentng person?

    • @allicmw557
      @allicmw557 Рік тому +3

      @@nytn I answered earlier with a long post. But simpler response is. He did look white. My grandmother was just pale. He was a little tanner. He cut family ties it seems when he moved. I never met his white sons for example. I never heard of them until I looked them up. My mom said she knew about them though when I asked. Anyway, my grandmother was not alone. She had sisters, friends similar to her. Lived in a bit of middle class bubble. But I don’t know how hard it was. Probably not so easy. She seemed to stick out in her school photos for sure. My guess is both of them were about 20-25% African at most tbh. Several generations back that was less uncommon due to the one-drop rule.

    • @manase5821
      @manase5821 Рік тому

      @@allicmw557 So if he is very white why he went "to being black", that's sound absurd, sounds like he is biracial.

  • @novemBURRbby
    @novemBURRbby Рік тому +19

    Shortly after my son was born, my aunt sent me some information about my mom’s dad. It came out he was French. Last year I did my 23 & Me because I was always curious about what I was, especially since my mom knew very little about her dad. After I got my results I looked up my grandfather’s name and came across a treasure chest of information! My great grandmother was creole (Spanish, French, Italian, British & African, First Nations descent) and my great grandfather was French from Louisiana. After finding out everything, it made stuff about me make so much sense! This whole thing has been the best decision I have ever made.
    The more you go on this journey, the greater sense of self you will have! Good luck girl!

  • @belindabrooks8679
    @belindabrooks8679 Рік тому +149

    Beautiful work! The story that you tell is exactly right. My mother who is 93 and still alive tells the same story. The bloodlines were strong. I see people all the time that I am related and do not know them. If I strike up a conversation, it never fails. They were beautiful people and they looked alike. Mother says that they were not allowed to ask questions regarding their ancestors. When their parents spoke of the past, the reverted to speaking French Creole which they would not allow there children to learn or speak.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +18

      Yes the French Creole comes up in later episodes! The children didn’t learn it so the adults could speak about family things in secret. Exactly like you said.

    • @josweetlove1537
      @josweetlove1537 Рік тому +19

      @ Belinda Brooks your comment sounds a lot like my Caribbean family. My paternal great-grandfather was French believed to be Huegenot, who travelled to Martinique then Trinidad. He married a black Caribbean woman. His children were never taught French in fact the elders only spoke the Patois (creole) so their children could not understand them. The French influence in Trinidad is still very strong although they never colonised the island and the British eventually captured and colonised. What a story.

    • @josweetlove1537
      @josweetlove1537 Рік тому +13

      @@nytn very true. This happened in the Caribbean islands influenced by the French. In Trinidad our elders spoke patois (pat'wah or broken French/African) which they only used to speak their personal business. Their children were not allowed to know it. It happened in my family. They were very Catholic and colorist. A part of our Afro French Caribbean history.

    • @shawnjackson6242
      @shawnjackson6242 Рік тому +29

      These people are my people we share same family make up buts is funny Black people recognize other black people no matter how light we know you are black and Indian

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +5

      @@shawnjackson6242 Wow, for some reason this almost made me cry-- in a good way. Thanks for commenting and following the journey :)

  • @lilah337
    @lilah337 Рік тому +8

    Hi, born and raised in SW Louisiana. Warms my heart to hear you’ve found out so much about your family history. We get so many descendants coming through to find out more. Our culture is slowly re-emerging from all the interest. The elders call this passé blanc where I’m from. Growing up I learned as much as I could from them which was difficult with the language barrier.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +3

      Your comment gave me goosebumps! So many people ARE reconnecting to their roots. I hope it changes our nation for the better. I hope you stay on the channel with me! I’m going to start a deep dive into our ancestors

    • @hailie_Selassie
      @hailie_Selassie Рік тому

      @@nytn how is is going to change racism against black people ? Yr GGmother passed for white and all of her descendants are now white and experience white privilege. Now, what actions do yr and yr family think they could do to go against racism?

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      @@hailie_Selassie This channel, for one. Digging into my family's history and telling my children and the world. You might be interested in this video I did on my enslaved 5th great grandfather and his daughter : ua-cam.com/video/uAxyz0q0A4s/v-deo.html

    • @sharonharris2645
      @sharonharris2645 Рік тому

      I literally got chills as I read your post. "The elders call this passé blanc where I’m from", 100% Love. Thank you for sharing.

  • @xxmoonlightxx6304
    @xxmoonlightxx6304 Рік тому +24

    She looked like my grandmother my mom mom. She was very light, but she knew she was black. I'm light but you can tell I'm black and proud of it.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +3

      Wow, thank you for sharing. Where did your family grow up if you don't mind? Im so glad you have that strong identity. It's a real blessing

    • @madreep
      @madreep Рік тому +5

      Same here. I have fair skin, red hair but my features are clearly Black. I love that part of me

    • @xxmoonlightxx6304
      @xxmoonlightxx6304 Рік тому

      I was born in New York born in Harlem

  • @michellewilliston1937
    @michellewilliston1937 Рік тому +31

    My friend who's white did an ancestry test and she found out she had several family members pass for white she was so excited to find out she had African blood in her she told me now we really got a lot in common 😂😂😂😂. This happens so much I had family members who passed as white or italian I understand why I think it's sad people had to hide who they where but it is what is.

    • @elettramia6380
      @elettramia6380 Рік тому

      You mean tried to pass as Southern Italian. Specifically southern because we are the ones with brown Mediterranean features. Or as northern Italians/ Northern Europeans call us terrone. 🙄THE CULTURA LATINA, THE LATIN PEOPLE, THE LATINO (Latini) TRIBES, THE LATIN ETHNICITY ALL COME FROM ITALY! LATINO IS THE SOLE IDENTITY OF SOUTHERN EUROPEAN LATIN MEDITERRANEAN DIASPORA. Latin europe was Latinized by ROME ITALY hence how Latina italy got the name Latina. & HISPANIC (Hispania) is literally the Latin language MEANING SPAIN NOT the NATIVE AMERICANS they Colonized. Latin America got its name SOLELY and ONLY to mean the part of the Americas CONQUERED by LATIN EUROPE and that is all it will EVER MEAN. Latin ORIGIN, HISTORY& people are NON INTERCHANGEABLE. STOP THE CULTURAL THEFT OF MY PEOPLE& OUR ANCESTRY. BRAINWASHED AMERICAN/ MOSTLY NORTH AMERICAN CULTURAL APPROPRIATION & CULTURAL THEFT FOR "PROFIT AND GAIN" WILL NEVER BE LATINO. CULTURAL APPROPRIATION EXIST BECAUSE THOSE LIKE YOU BELIEVE YOU HAVE AND WILL CONTINUE TO BENEFIT FROM THE CULTURAL THEFT TOWARDS US TRUE LATIN PEOPLE AND OUR HISTORICAL ACCOMPLISHMENTS! AND US TRUE LATINS ARE & HAVE ALWAYS BEEN MULTI GENETICALLY MIXED ETHNIC PEOPLE DUE TO OUR GENETIC CONTRIBUTORS FROM OUR MIDDLE EASTERN (ASIAN), NORTHERN AFRICAN, AND BALKAN GYPSIE DNA. THERE ARE NO "WHITE" LATINS. JUST MORE ASSIMILATION . SOUTH CENTRAL AMERICANS AND MEXICANS ARE NATIVE AMERICANS, MESTIZOS, CASTIZOS, PARDOS, ZAMBOS, AND PURE SUB SAHARAN AFRICANS. NOT LATINS, NOT LATIN BLOOD, THEREFORE NOT LATINO. IN SOUTH CENTRAL AMERICA AND MÉXICO THE ONLY PEOPLE CALLED LATINO AND HISPANIC ARE US SOUTHERN EUROPEANS OF LATIN MEDITERRANEAN ORIGIN. OBVIOUSLY THE SAME IN LATIN EUROPE. PUSHING AND CONTRIBUTING TO BRAINWASHED NORTH AMERICAN MISAPPROPRIATION OF FOREIGN TERMS SUCH AS LATIN/LATINO AS TRENDING PROPAGANDA FOR SOCIAL STATUS TO APPEAR MORE DESIRABLE DOES NOT JUSTIFY THE CONTINUING CONTRIBUTIONS OF CULTURAL THEFT. THE TERM LATINO DERIVES FROM THE TERM LATINI, THE LATINI WHERE THE VERY FIRST LATIN TRIBE TO EXIST FROM ITALY! LATINI IS PLURAL MEANING MORE THAN ONE LATINO! AND LATINO IS SINGULAR FOR LATINI MEANING ONE LATINO. THE SAME WITH LATINA AND LATINE. ALL TERMS CREATED BY THE TRUE LATIN PEOPLE OF ITALY. PUSHING BRAINWASHED AMERICAN MOSTLY NORTH AMERICAN CULTURAL RAPE AS A FASHION TREND FOR “PROFIT & GAIN” NEEDS TO BE EXPOSED. YOU CAN NOT BE PART OF AN ORIGIN, HISTORY AND ETHNICITY WHICH YOUR ANCESTORS FACTUALLY ARE NOT HISTORICALLY RESPONSIBLE FOR.

    • @DarthFurie
      @DarthFurie Рік тому +7

      Similar thing happened to my buddy, he was told all his life he had some "Cherokee" ancestry, white guy with a couple vaguely ethnic looking features and curly hair. Come to find out after an ancestry test that he's almost 20% Sub-Saharan African descent, no trace of Native ancestry. Crazy thing was his family has some really problematic ideas about race, I was like somebody knew they were lying lol cuz ain't no way

    • @carlasouthwell7422
      @carlasouthwell7422 Рік тому

      You can't change the past

    • @cfclazio621
      @cfclazio621 11 місяців тому

      passed as white or italian ??????? italians are european they are WHITE lol

  • @Kabeyavictoria
    @Kabeyavictoria Рік тому +40

    We need more and more stories like yours. Not just for you but for the sake of humanity. Too many important stories like yours fall into oblivion. Amazing story sis

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +5

      I feel very humbled by this comment and I appreciate you taking the time to say what you did--I didn't know I had so many kindred spirits in the world!🥰

    • @Kabeyavictoria
      @Kabeyavictoria Рік тому +4

      @@nytn ❤❤

    • @lindyashford7744
      @lindyashford7744 Рік тому +1

      @@nytn you really do have. I come from a colonial family but also sort of remixed several times. My mum always brought me up to be proud of my mixed heritage which is South Asian and English, but with other European mixes from the past too. She herself though culturally white was never accepted as white here in Britain. It is not easy to be mixed as both black/brown people and white people have a nose for it. I once met a ŵoman who was mixed and identified as black and who to me was exactly that, she looked at me and my child and said well, you two are different, and then burst out I know what it is, you are mixed! I was so happy as she gave us both a hug and it felt like instant acceptance, it was sweet relief! One of the hardest things of all has been listening to white people who presume that is what I am now I am old and have white hair, telling me what they think of POC no matter what their origin. It really makes my toes curl ! Funnily enough in South Asia where my was from I was always instantly accepted and always felt at home. Personally I never use the words race or or inter racial, bi racial etc, first because we are all human and not really different at all we all started brown skinned anyway, but also because it fixes people into a hierarchy based up son skin. I prefer mixed heritage, it takes in the very many variations around the world. I can see from your account already that the background of people from Louise/Lola’s part of America is altogether more complex than just a binary colour distinction. There’s a lot of us out there with incredible family histories forged by historical events neither we nor our ancestors had much control over, these secrets were mostly kept not out of shame but out of a sense of protection for the next generations. In my case the real names of women of colour are often omitted to meet the social needs of the times. Wear your history with pride, maybe one day our great grandchildren and their children will be able to openly claim and find interesting their mixed heritage, wouldn’t that be marvellous!

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      beautiful comment-- thank you so much for that.

  • @TheKa89
    @TheKa89 Рік тому +20

    This is wonderful to share this history which usually by the time it's recognised is so far forgotten we can't find our roots.
    My great-grandmother was Métis and people primary said she was Québécoise, which she always was quick to agree with. It wasn't until she passed that my grandmother and I got to sit down and go through her family photos and records that had been hidden away for decades and voilà, we found out the truth. Her father was given a French surname by his adoptive father, but looking by him he would never have passed. My great-grandmother was the only one out of her siblings that looked fair enough and thus was able to afford more social mobility in Canada and the US at the time by just being considered either French Canadian or from 'some southern european ethnicity'.
    You understand why they did it, but at the same time you wish you could've had the opportunity to really know them and the rest of your family. That's the true evil of assimilation for me, the erasure.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      I love how you phrased this---"you understand why they did it, but at the same time you wish you could've had the opportunity to really know them and the rest of your family". Thats it for me entirely. I am so glad you found the channel.

    • @kokikaiboston5439
      @kokikaiboston5439 Рік тому

      France is not a homogeneous country

  • @madreep
    @madreep Рік тому +64

    Alot of people passed back in the day. Mostly for economic reasons. Sad to be in a place where you have to give up everything you know and love just to make a bit of progress. I'm glad no one that I know of passed in my family. I always say I'm lightly melanated but hella Black. I'd be sad if that would have been taken from me. It's a very important part of my identity.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +5

      I am so happy hearing stories of people who have a rock-solid identity. It's a strange thing to inherit for our family in a lot of ways. Thank you so much for watching episode 1 and sharing with me!

    • @madreep
      @madreep Рік тому +2

      @@jcjc3914 I found out my dad wasn't my biological father when I took the DNA test. It's been almost 4 years now and I think I've come to terms with it finally. Both of my parents are gone so I couldn't ask them any questions and I don't have any matches that are close enough for me to know who my biological father is with absolute certainty. I have a pretty good idea though but he has also passed on many years ago. I was just glad I was still Black lol. That would have devastated me even more cause it is my identity. My daddy was the one who raised me. Loved me. Gave me my name.

  • @Nikkiole84
    @Nikkiole84 Рік тому +92

    Being a New Orleans native I know this story all too well. I researched documents where my great grandmother was listed as white, then mulatto and finally negro. I'm sure they passed as white to have a better life as sad as it may be to hear back in those days. "Passe Blanc" is what we called it when I came up in New Orleans. To this day my family is still in the dark about our ancestors even after DNA test. My grandparents died with many of those secrets

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +6

      Don’t give up! I know the DNA test actually was not helpful except for matching with relatives. I just was taught the term Passé Blanc this summer…. there are ways to find your ancestors- I’ll be talking about that soon. I hope you stay!

    • @Nikkiole84
      @Nikkiole84 Рік тому +4

      @@nytn thank you so much!

    • @lapislazulii141
      @lapislazulii141 Рік тому

      They passed because they were. Having SOME W.African Admix does NOT remove your”Whiteness”.Color is NOT synonymous w/race.

  • @lking3024
    @lking3024 Рік тому +9

    So many people from Louisiana did this via the great migration to California, Chicago and Detroit. Still today many grandchildren and great grandchildren don’t know they are black. First you have to fully understand the deep implications of slavery and how free people of color bought their darker skinned brothers, sisters and others out of slavery and took them to the North. They became responsible for taking care of their siblings and relatives financially because they could pass. There’s so much more to this. The real stories should be told.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      This made me cry, not even kidding. The idea of all of these people not knowing who they are....the need to escape if at all possible. I hope you enjoy the other episodes, you might especially like episode 3 when I went to Louisiana to find out why Lola was afraid to be a person of color. Speaks of what you just said. Thank you so much for your comment, Im going to sit with it awhile. Here is episode 3 ua-cam.com/video/bLxaTBhCu_Y/v-deo.html

  • @naughtygirl77
    @naughtygirl77 Рік тому +18

    Hi, I was in MD this past week and was told my name Lola, is pronounced in 3 different ways. One of them was Lodasea. It is a name from Nigeria. Hope that helps!

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +8

      WHAT?! That’s insane. Our African roots were mostly Nigerian on the DNA test. I always wondered about Lola’s given name. This is awesome lead for me- thank you!!!

    • @honeydew9954
      @honeydew9954 Рік тому +9

      'Omolola' is a Yoruba name from Nigeria, Lola for short.

    • @sharonharris2645
      @sharonharris2645 Рік тому

      Yes, Thanks for sharing that information.

  • @lynettejournet299
    @lynettejournet299 Рік тому +4

    Great work and touching story

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much, Miss Lynette! The journey is just beginning :)

  • @danityvanityinsanity
    @danityvanityinsanity Рік тому +17

    It’s so sad that Lola felt that she had to lie about her race, even in racially diverse New York in order to make a better life for herself and her family. She knew that skin color played a vital role in one’s health, wealth, success, and quality of life, especially in the past.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      I agree! I don’t think our area of NY was as diverse yet though. Makes me sad

  • @pauladanner6210
    @pauladanner6210 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for sharing your amazing journey! I have gone though some of the same things researching my roots.. Many secrets and many lies in my family... Both of my grandparents migrated from Louisiana to Wisconsin in the 1920's.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      Paula-there are SO many of us! It’s time to start peeling away the layers together

  • @dldove22
    @dldove22 Рік тому +2

    This was fascinating. I think I read a little about the research because I was living in the same area. I hoped I'd hear more. I have mixed ancestry that was hidden too. It's important to know the diverse people who contributed to and made part of American society. Thank you for sharing the history and I look forward to learning more.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Debra, thank you so so much for your thoughtful comment. I hope you stay around the channel.There are so many of us

  • @helena8274
    @helena8274 Рік тому +82

    Glad that the family are ready to know their heritage. My poor mum born of a unknown white dad and African mother in the 40's tried to pass for pure African. She looked different from her 11 siblings. She met my dad who was of the same exact scenario. We are biracial and our cousins too. Our kids are 3rd generation biracial. We have ended up being friends with other biracial people here in Kenya. We have a group where we catch up and get together. Our parents had a difficult childhood, you can imagine it was taboo to even ask why you looked different. These were children born of white colonial fathers who did not want to be found out by their family. Our grandmother's on the other hand got married with their mixed race babies who deemed as children of shame, ugly looking and all. They were not black enough. Today we are proud of who we are. We consider ourselves "people of a small tribe"

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +5

      Helena, so. glad you are here and for your thoughtful comment. I am amazed by the stories that are pouring out. I hope you will stay on the channel!

    • @vaimende
      @vaimende Рік тому +3

      Do alot of mixed race Kenyans marry other mixed race Kenyans?

    • @amor797
      @amor797 Рік тому +2

      In fact you are people of a big tribe worldwide.
      Everywhere that happened, now i think we can say we are millions and millions from mixed races in this particular situation.
      But i agree some places its different based on the unique history of countries and cultural views.
      Like where i live we are certainly all mixed and its not a big deal, we embrace it. When in the caribeans there is racism against creoles with fair skin, called traitors etc
      even if they are descendants and have nothing to do with past events.

    • @marionmackie1436
      @marionmackie1436 Рік тому

      😊

    • @victoria_njeru
      @victoria_njeru 8 місяців тому +1

      Sending you love from Kenya 🇰🇪

  • @likeforreal-gn6ds
    @likeforreal-gn6ds 8 місяців тому +5

    I don’t know how I came to this video, but I watched it with my mouth wide open, because it’s so similar to my grandmother’s story. She was of mixed decent and very passable for white. Irish, German, Native American and black. Her name was Louise , and also from Long Island. And also someone who did not talk about her past. Thank you for this.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  8 місяців тому

      That is incredible! This is the first episode of a handful. I hope you watch the rest and let me know how it compares to your story

  • @aishashiddat1038
    @aishashiddat1038 Рік тому +11

    A lot of blacks with multicultural heritage were reclassified after the 1930s. This happened to my maternal great grand parents they were listed as mulatto before the 1930s. After 1930 they were classified as just black. My great grandfather has Cherokee-Shawnee roots. His grandfather is buried on Shawnee territory in Oklahoma. We also have traced one of my maternal grandfathers back to Scotland. Many whites particularly in the South have a black ancestor in the family tree .

    • @ucity88
      @ucity88 Рік тому +2

      "Many whites particularly in the South have a black ancestor in the family tree ."
      The _____ in the woodpile. 🤣🤣

    • @aishashiddat1038
      @aishashiddat1038 Рік тому +2

      @@ucity88 whatever you wanna call it. They know, most just don’t acknowledge it…

    • @justjules2029
      @justjules2029 Рік тому

      Many Native Americans or anyone not white were also classified as Black. There’s an actual law in Virginia They were called racial integrity laws. Many Black Americans are actually Native American or mixed African and Native American. There’s also some whites that paid to be classified as Native American to gain access to land grants. They are called the $5 Indians.

  • @donotneed2250
    @donotneed2250 Рік тому +9

    "Not allowed to see how the sausage is made?" Love that! The fashions and hair styles in the pictures also gave me flashbacks as I was born in the mid 1950's.
    My paternal grandmother was about Lola's complexion if not a shade darker but her parents were a bit lighter. From what I was told growing up it's from having Cherokee in the blood.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +4

      That is really interesting. Lola was a lot lighter than her siblings- but it sounded like she was pretty careful about the sun. I don’t know how Lola’s mother identified but most of our native line comes from that side.

  • @desdemona222b
    @desdemona222b Рік тому +12

    Being "passe blanc" in south Louisiana is still fairly common to this day. I met a woman from New Orleans in 2008 who talked with me at length about coming from a passe white family down there. They snub people with darker skin and try to only have children for white or light-skinned partners. This has gone on for centuries down there.

    • @denisehenry3427
      @denisehenry3427 Рік тому +4

      Yes, you're right. It is still practice in New Orleans and central Louisiana. . It's easier for a dark skin black man to marry a white woman than a Creole woman.

    • @pierrerochon7271
      @pierrerochon7271 9 місяців тому

      SO? bLACKS ARE MARRYING WHITE WOMEN AND mEXICAN WOMEN, iTALIAN WOMEN aSIAN WOMEN, - WHO CARES? i DON'T -I PASS WHEN I WANT TO- BLESS EVERYONE

  • @pamweese7678
    @pamweese7678 Рік тому +10

    My great grandmother was also mulatto. She was born and raised in Pa. I discovered a whole new family as a result of my genealogy research. When my grandmother got married she moved to Ohio and began her new life as a woman of color who was passing as white. She did what she felt would make her life easier.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Pam, I am so glad you found the channel. I love hearing stories that are similar to our family. I hope you check out the other videos and stay around! :)

  • @kimiveymakeup0
    @kimiveymakeup0 Рік тому +14

    I am born and raised in central Louisiana. Not far from Natchitoches actually. It’s not uncommon for someone to say “you’ve got “Indian” in your blood/family”, when they suspect you are “mixed” with another race. It can literally be any other race. Good luck with your search for truth 💕

  • @janedoe1229
    @janedoe1229 Рік тому

    This production is well done

  • @710MaryJane
    @710MaryJane Рік тому +33

    Why are you surprised she did this? It was all about SURVIVAL. DISCRIMINATION is horrible, unless you have lived it, you wouldn’t know how painful it is. SHE DID THE RIGHT THING! Kudos to her! ❤😊🎉

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +4

      I can’t imagine what she was trying to protect the kids from. When I edited episode three I started to figure it out. That was really hard

    • @JayBee-dr9bh
      @JayBee-dr9bh Рік тому +4

      Unambiguously Black people live this reality everyday in this country. Who doesn’t know about discrimination? Perhaps you, but not Black folks. Speak for yourself.

    • @darbyhilltopreunion3061
      @darbyhilltopreunion3061 Рік тому +2

      She did "her" thing for her reasons. Not necessarily the "right" thing! I am not surprised at this, I just chose to honor all those who stood their ground as Black even though they suffered for it. Indian indeed! None of the folks in this video actually told us that they found BLACK in their ancestry or who it was. One of them did allude to it though. Black must be a curse that I don't know about! lol

    • @anna-mariadavis5914
      @anna-mariadavis5914 Рік тому +1

      As a black personality who is very ambiguous, I think that is a terrible sentiment what about obviously black people? I’m sickened by these comments because u know how badly black folks are treated yet most of u don’t give a damn about us or our treatment this world is just a hell scape.

    • @mbrower3304
      @mbrower3304 10 місяців тому

      I personally don't believe that denying who you are is "the right thing", but she obviously did what she thought she had to do.

  • @deellaboe437
    @deellaboe437 Рік тому +12

    This was survival it wasn't to harm or hurt. I'm glad she lived the life she wanted and happy the family can know the truth.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      I hope you check out some of the other videos! I have uncovered so much already!

    • @deellaboe437
      @deellaboe437 Рік тому

      @@nytn yes indeed. I just finished the one about the horrible treatment of Italians. Great topics!

  • @brwynn
    @brwynn Рік тому +13

    My great grandmother was half white and black. My great grandfather was Black, Native American and white. They had 5 children together. They lived on the family farm with acres . She left him said life was too hard. Married a white man up north passed as white and they had 7 children together. That did a number on my grandma and her siblings. They was so fair they could pass as well. Hair silky like Indians. Had African American features nose or lips. But they quickly denied they was remotely white because of their mother. I grew up asking my mother why is your mother white and you’re black?? My mother was light skin African American. But the 5yr old in me couldn’t grasp. But she loved all us. She had 11 children married at 14yrs of age. Had children from every color of the rainbow . But the darkest ones were so beautiful. Because I could see the Native American in them. I remember my cousins visiting asking why aren’t you light like your mother??? I was brown skin like my father. But my mother taught my brother and I that our skin tone was beautiful. So we didn’t have problems in that area. She instilled many great things in us. She would be livid . If she knew I shared this with social media. I’m also from Louisiana. So I have all that in my bloodline. Louisiana is a melting pot like Gumbo. Man I miss home a lot these days. I have white family members their name is Osborne. I’m sure they’re are aware of it now. But they wouldn’t dare disclose this information now. Racism is still rampant in Louisiana. So I can understand why grandma was upset. You left your children. Got divorced the husband and children. And started another family. It had to hurt. From my understanding from my mother her grandmother look completely white with red hair. She did comeback to visit her 1st of children. But her children with her white husband never knew she was passing. He thought she just was visiting sisters and other family members. I guess for her it was self preservation huh?? ? And on my dad side they was owned by Irish slave masters. It’s amazing what you find out when you research.

    • @brwynn
      @brwynn Рік тому

      Aunt Maggie look just like my grandmother. Except she had straight silky brown hair like an Indian. High cheekbones as well. I use to hate them . But I love them with my full lips. It’s funny how other’s insecurities can make question yourself. Thx for sharing

    • @FourSeasons04
      @FourSeasons04 Рік тому

      Wow, what a sad beginning for your grandmother. Do you know what happened to your great-grandfather after his wife left, and your great aunts/uncles (your grandmother's four siblings)?

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      This made me laugh, I NEVER would have thought Aunt Maggie was anything but Irish until now as an adult looking back and....yah. I see it. So glad for all the discussion you have brought!

    • @brwynn
      @brwynn Рік тому

      @@nytn I wish I could send you a picture. It’s so uncanny. But I love it. And you’re brave. I pray that I didn’t sound like I was being mean. With social media and texts it’s hard to guage a person.🥰🥰🥰

    • @brwynn
      @brwynn Рік тому

      @@FourSeasons04 My great grandfather never remarried. He raised his children until they left and married. He worked on the family farm until his death. My Aunts/Uncles never married a white person. They did the opposite. I think they was jaded given the family circumstances. But I’m glad she is accepting of Shae happened in that era.

  • @anastaciaqoachela3809
    @anastaciaqoachela3809 8 місяців тому

    Love You Danielle painful this but the way you put it makes light.

  • @Life101_mindset_makeover
    @Life101_mindset_makeover 11 місяців тому +2

    The passing for white era is shrouded in mystery and your content helped shed light as to why. In my research…the term “mulatto” was the last designation used before families were simply considered “white” or “black”. On my paternal side my ancestry is American Indian from Kentucky…and my great grandfather was the last to be considered “mulatto”. The whole community knew him as “chief”. We also had other family members who “passed for white” but it was more like a business decision for the family b/c it meant better wages…specifically for those family members who didn’t own land. Your family’s story has reminded me that there’s so much to uncover from that era in time. Thank you for sharing!

  • @louiZiana-Gurl
    @louiZiana-Gurl Рік тому +3

    My aunt started doing genealogy on our family & it’s amazing to find out things that weren’t discussed & secrets our grandparents took to their graves😞

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      it was so common!!

  • @syhartfield
    @syhartfield Рік тому +4

    Very interesting. This is the first mention I have seen of Campti, LA where my children's relatives are from. When you research the history of the town, they really did have a lot of Native American people in the region, so perhaps their family has both types of heritage. Thanks for sharing.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Thank you for commenting and watching! Yes Lola’s moms family was native and Lola’s dads side was African. The paper trail confirmed the DNA communities we got- I’ll share those soon. Campti’s history is so vibrant

  • @Mowerswoodstockflea
    @Mowerswoodstockflea Рік тому +1

    Well done and fascinating.

  • @SymoneDipini
    @SymoneDipini Рік тому

    Thanks for sharing. Cane river is a story similar to yours that explained a lot of Louisiana culture during that time

  • @moorek1967
    @moorek1967 Рік тому +7

    Lena Horne was light and Johnny Cash's first wife Vivian Liberto was also light. In fact, it was proven that Roseanne Cash, Johnny and Vivian's oldest daughter, is cousin to Angela Bassett. So it happened more often than people think.

  • @margueritehebert5389
    @margueritehebert5389 Рік тому +3

    Thank you for these videos. The history and telling it helps many to understand and learn from the past so God willing no one would go through this again. Your stories give me insight so I can more understand, empathy to feel compassion for others and love and respect for those who walked a different journey than mine. From south Louisiana. The only thing I knew of in my history from a ways back is that you could not speak in French in schools or you would get punished . My great great aunt ( La lee as we called her. Not sure of spelling) only spoke French and she lived to be 102

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      Marguerite, this comment and your other one were so beautiful and insightful. I teared up a little but at both of them. I didnt know French was not allowed to be spoken-- Lola apparently grew up speaking Creole/Cajun French but never told any of us and never taught my family. What you said is one of the reasons I decided to share our family's ongoing journey---so we can maybe not judge each other so quickly. Appreciate you, and I hope you will stay on the channel for awhile!

    • @margueritehebert5389
      @margueritehebert5389 Рік тому

      Absolutely. My first and only granddaughter is 6 and has Native American in her. Let me tell you she’s the most beautiful little girl and I’m so proud of her heritage and the good looks and absolutely beautiful long thick hair she has.

  • @shakiyagotdreams2299
    @shakiyagotdreams2299 Рік тому

    Great videos. I’m sure if we all peel things back we can find our a lot . New sub. Enjoying your journey

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      So glad you are here! You are right--there's a lot to find in all of our family stories:)

  • @sharonallison9273
    @sharonallison9273 Рік тому +8

    ❤️ Love this rich history so much! My grandfather, my moms dad, told me the story of how my moms mother was part White from her Dads side of her family back in Alexandria, Louisiana but he didn't explain why, he just said "they" don't want us kid's to know! My grandmother looked more like her Indian side too me! Thank you so much for this documentary. We need the children to know how important this was so it can't be repeated. Even for myself, I notice that some Whites don't like me and also some Black's don't feel comfortable with me but thanks to the history I was gifted, I understand and it never bothers me at all! We're all the same!

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Sharon, I got goosebumps reading your comment-- it resonated SO deeply with me. I hope you will stay with me on the channel, so much to unpack, learn and talk about. Once I became a mom, this was of utmost importance. No more "not knowing".

  • @rebeccamd7903
    @rebeccamd7903 Рік тому +8

    That happened so much all over this country. My family are from the Appalachia’s and they’re very multi ethnic. My grandma and my great grandma both used to school me in how to whiten my skin just in case and I was born in the 70’s. They were genuinely afraid to share their heritage & just said we were either French or dark German when we were Native, African, European, and Middle Eastern mixed.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      I tried lightening my face in highschool, I seriously messed up my skin😌

  • @vizinat2020
    @vizinat2020 Рік тому +4

    Oh my goodness. This sounds very familiar. My grandmother was from Ebarb, Louisiana. The Choctaw-Apache Tribe of Ebarb, which isn't that far from Campti. My grandmother came from a broken, poor area, not forthcoming with family history. Her racial description changed the in the 1940s census. Most of my family who may have been knowlegeable of our heritage on my father's side is deceased so I'm back tracking through records and learning mostly on my own. I'm so glad you put this documentary together.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      Stacey--this is crazy, but Lola's mother's side looks to be connected to the Choctaw Apache tribe! I have not finished all the paperwork on it yet. I did speak to Dr Robert Caldwell (who is in the tribe) in this series, I think he is in Episode 3 and 4. Im so glad you found the channel! Let's stay connected :)

    • @vizinat2020
      @vizinat2020 Рік тому

      @@nytn I’ll definitely continue to follow your story! 😁

  • @anassahbenji6056
    @anassahbenji6056 Рік тому +23

    She was smart not to tell bc yt ppl are very racist and cruel esp back then. When they couldn't get in trouble for it. Lola was smart. She just wanted to live in Peace.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +4

      I think you are right about wanting to just live in peace--once she had kids, it seemed like her goal was to protect them the best she could. Thanks for watching:)

    • @whitneyangelie3682
      @whitneyangelie3682 Рік тому +2

      Yea it’s really easy to look through the eyes of the 21st century and blame her for “passing” but the truth is back in the day if you could pass, most people did just that, because it meant a completely better life for their family. Imagine how scared she always must have been tho of people finding out her secret. Or how scared she would’ve been every time she got pregnant wondering “what if this baby comes out with undeniable African looks?” It would be exhausting to live a lie like that.

  • @diontaedaughtry974
    @diontaedaughtry974 Рік тому

    Great video 👍👍

  • @cedriccrain9585
    @cedriccrain9585 Рік тому +18

    my great great grandmother was Angelina Perot! buried in St Natchitoches cemetery.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +4

      That must be us!!'

  • @nreynolds75243
    @nreynolds75243 Рік тому +11

    Back then it was rough being black down south. I was raised in Monroe, Louisiana. My mom's family is from there. Last name LeDent. We're black with French ancestry. Louisiana is so unique. The mixture of people and food. French, Spanish, Native American, African. Mostly due to the area being at the water which was a main means of traveling back then.

    • @sharonallison9273
      @sharonallison9273 Рік тому

      Thank 😊 you for explaining this! Now my family history is much clearer! ❤️ 😍 loving it all!!! Checking ✔️ ✅️ in from the Bay Area!!

    • @chetyoubetya8565
      @chetyoubetya8565 Рік тому +2

      I don't recall any black people ever saying it was any easier to be black in the east or Midwest. All the same laws applied and so did segregation. It was not just in the south that is a massive misconception.

  • @blackjag121
    @blackjag121 Рік тому +7

    My grandmother is from Louisiana. A lot of people with identical stories like this look very similar. Especially from natchitoches, LA and DeSoto. Lots of French names like Eloise, Alfred, Effie, Florence, Frederick, Clementine, Mary, Helen, My grandma did not opt to pass but our family genes are ambiguous and you can’t tell from some of my family members are African American

  • @emilyflotilla931
    @emilyflotilla931 Рік тому +12

    What a beautiful woman your great grandmother was.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      Thank you-- Im really honored to tell her story

  • @thebeatonpath
    @thebeatonpath Рік тому +3

    Welcome to the wild wide world of DNA. I absolutely LOVE the stuff I find doing genealogy. Times have changed. It was a different time and place back then. BTW, I'm local if you ever want to reach out.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      Heyyy Nashville! I love this too, I know there is so so much more to learn. I hope I can continue to share it with you all.

  • @MaureenKo1
    @MaureenKo1 Рік тому +5

    It’s unfortunate that we’re not close enough while our elders are around to learn these things by chatting instead of interviewing them. But I’m happy for this woman who knows the importance of ancestral pov.

    • @zoebird6655
      @zoebird6655 Рік тому

      Well, there is always DNA

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      My next video will address dna!

  • @aaronmichael9788
    @aaronmichael9788 Рік тому +11

    What tickles me is some people are so racist but if you have them shake their family tree a bit, they may discover who they hate, loved to create them and you wouldn't be here without them.

  • @tee8248
    @tee8248 Рік тому +11

    Very common story in Louisiana.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      I was so surprised to find that out. Up in NY I thought my family was just really really fringe about things…I had no idea this was a community experience

    • @vanessapete1091
      @vanessapete1091 Рік тому

      VERY.

  • @f.frederickskitty2910
    @f.frederickskitty2910 Рік тому +6

    Your great grandma was beautiful. I'm trying to trace my black ancestors right now - I wasn't even aware of it until I did a DNA test although it was a pleasant surprise. I just want to know who I am and where I came from too.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Wow what a story!! I hope you enjoy the other episodes and can find a place where you feel comfortable digging into your history at your own pace. Im so glad you are here :)

  • @rodimuspm
    @rodimuspm Рік тому +3

    WOW!!! I'm currently going through your story right now, and it very similar to mines. My great father last name is Buard, and they actually came from the Magnolia Plantation in Derry LA. Not only is my family is part African, French and Cherokee/Choctaw. We might be related 🤔

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      Oh my gosh I bet we are! I found Lola’s dads side goes through the Metoyer plantation-Melrose and one other one. Please hang around the channel and we can figure it out!

  • @sashagoree3749
    @sashagoree3749 Рік тому

    Thank you for sharing my family has the same story ❤❤❤❤ pretty cool sis

  • @slarvadain188
    @slarvadain188 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting story. I’m from New Orleans and quite a few families share similar stories.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Really?? It’s weirdly nice to know we weren’t alone but also horrific that it was common…

  • @lesliewalsh240
    @lesliewalsh240 Рік тому +3

    I think we are related. And we didn't know that my Grandmother wasn't just French and Native American. They left Campti for Monroe. My Great-grandmother wouldn't let anyone talk about anything from past. It took DNA tests and my niece doing the genealogy. They went to segregated schools being black, white, and Indian. We have Perot's in our family tree but right now I can't tell you how far back. It's nice to know our family wasn't the only one whose family was "passed" as white from Campti, which apparently is known for being mixed.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Come find me on Facebook! Im no genealogist but I do share a lot of stuff I've come across for the family. You might really like seeing episode 3 of this series.ua-cam.com/video/bLxaTBhCu_Y/v-deo.html

  • @rocketreindeer
    @rocketreindeer 9 місяців тому

    This was so powerful. The stories I could tell you sis, of families I know where a grandparent admitted on their deathbed to being Indigenous/Native, after a lifetime of denial. The pressure still exists in shadows today, but back then, identity and clamming up was a whole other world of internal stress and self-repression.

  • @creoleyaya914
    @creoleyaya914 Рік тому

    Your story is truly amazing. I'm a Louisiana Creole.. Kinda obvious by the screen name, but I'm very involved in my family's genealogy and am part of a couple of organizations. Please, if there is a way to be in contact, I would truly love that.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Yes!! That would be amazing. You can either find me on FB under my name (Danielle Romero )or you can contact me by going here www.youtube.com/@nytn/about. Looking forward to it!

  • @charlenef7138
    @charlenef7138 Рік тому +3

    You have a beautiful family - when I learn of these type issues where people really were light enough to actually have a chance to choose to be or not to be. (Why not take the easy way out if it's an option that's open, cause with us still being killed in 2022 with no consequence like it's a sport I won't say that I'd be certain if I would, or I wouldn't)
    I wonder with the struggle of survival back then which side they'd stand on and I wonder how stressing and frightening it could be in daily living if they were found out. Or the anguish of not being sure if they'd totally fit in because deep in their gut, they had doubts. -
    Well, I was a medium complexion lighter than my brother but no doubt that we were blacks. Being on this side and having to endure and figure out the survival maneuvers has made me prouder, wiser, more determined to keep the fire burning if only because doing so was spiteful on those wanting to put it out. *Cause NO MAN has the right to out my fire only the creator of the universe has that right.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Thank you so much for watching and sharing on here. It's hard to understand just what my family experienced because I did not experience any of that directly--just the effects of it on the way the family treated certain topics. I love how much confidence you have in who you are-- that is a gift.

  • @getreal4real169
    @getreal4real169 Рік тому +3

    Yes, this went on a lot in Louisiana. It doesn’t surprise me. My grandmother and grandfather were from Louisiana and I’ve heard some stories similar to this one.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      I feel like I missed so much history from Louisiana because of this. I’m scrambling to save it all and I hope to share what I find in the future!

    • @zoebird6655
      @zoebird6655 Рік тому +1

      The French were lovers, and lovers of life, they didn't discriminate when it came to love, and this is why a lot of black people are mixed, and you can see the Creole in them.

    • @getreal4real169
      @getreal4real169 Рік тому

      @@zoebird6655 Yes, I agree. I have a leather bound book from my grandmother with her family information dating back to the 1800’s. When I started my family history, the census documents labeled my grandmother and great grandmother as mulatto. I’m still digging through everything but my DNA came back with some weird high percentages of Irish. So I guess I’ll see what’s up with that.

  • @MsGemini
    @MsGemini Рік тому +1

    Your opening of Natchitoches is great! This is where my people are from. I spent summers growing up in St. Maurice (which is up the road from Campti) every family knows each other out there. We go down there 4-5 times a year because that’s where most of my family is from along with south Louisiana. My family is African American, Native American and French which is a normal mixture in that area. We come very fair and very dark skin even with the mixture.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      I love that you recognized that! And I think a big piece of this is a strong TRI RACIAL heritage. Acknowledging all parts, not just one.

  • @JL0ndon
    @JL0ndon 8 місяців тому

    It’s interesting in my native language Lola is the word for grandmother so for years i thought my grandmothers name was Lola. Wonderfully done video

  • @kathyharmon2093
    @kathyharmon2093 Рік тому +4

    I was born in Louisiana, my father was dark complected with dark curly hair, a very handsome man, my mother a very light complected redhead, I am light complected like my mother but have my dad’s curly hair ( the first hairdresser that could do anything with it was black) I am 65 years old and have wondered all my adult life what my actual heritage is, I seriously think I may do one of the DNA test’s…

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      Kathy-- oh my gosh. YOU BELONG HERE. Im so glad you found the channel Keep me posted on your family story

  • @Itsmeyoualreadykno
    @Itsmeyoualreadykno Рік тому +3

    Woww awesome story ❤️❤️

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      Im so grateful you watched it! I hope you enjoy the other episodes as well. Thanks for commenting

    • @Itsmeyoualreadykno
      @Itsmeyoualreadykno Рік тому

      @@nytn im making my way through them now! Just awesome! Ty!

  • @Kabeyavictoria
    @Kabeyavictoria Рік тому +2

    I subscribed to your channel quick

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      I am so grateful to have your support! It was scary taking the first step with this project.

    • @Kabeyavictoria
      @Kabeyavictoria Рік тому +1

      @@nytn no no don't be scared and write a book even. Try to record and leave a trace about your family history. Give them a voice

  • @Anointed012
    @Anointed012 Рік тому

    What a interesting video.

  • @justinspraytech7342
    @justinspraytech7342 Рік тому +7

    You also might want to look up Mrs. Winnie Perot. From Campti.
    The Perot's live down Campti bayou road. Use to be mulatto bayou road, up till about 20 years ago it got renamed.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +4

      Campti bayou road comes up with a Perot cousin in episode 3- I had no idea about the original name. WOW. So glad you’re on the journey with me!

  • @doreal
    @doreal Рік тому +21

    Passing makes me angry for so many reasons. All I think about is the movie "Imitation of Life" from 1959. Passing hurt families.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      It definitely had ripple effects. There was a lot of...lying about things. The age thing was one, there were others. It kind of created an environment where the truth was...relative. And that's really hard. Thank you so much for watching and sharing on here.

    • @doreal
      @doreal Рік тому +3

      You should watch "Imitation of Life" from 1959. It's a great movie about a young woman passing.@@nytn

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +1

      I will-- thank you for the rec! Im learning so much from all the feedback on this.

    • @doreal
      @doreal Рік тому +2

      You clearly don't know what is involved when people pass. I am not here to educate you on the subject.@@LaAerial

    • @rozzie5651
      @rozzie5651 Рік тому

      ​@@dorealsome people that look like they could pass, prefer not to and if asked they will say they are predominantly African american.

  • @MaryJaneBurns
    @MaryJaneBurns Рік тому +1

    This is so common in America. I’m always interested in hearing the stories from the past. I encourage you and your family to get dna tested just for your own information.

  • @9thGenerationCajun
    @9thGenerationCajun Рік тому +1

    This is mind blowing to me it feels like you're talking about my family. When my mom & dad met in 1961 in New Orleans my mom says he told her his mother (my grandmother) was half black (He never told his kids this,But I kinda knew early on) Growing up it was very obvious that my dad didn't look like my grandfather. All of my dad's siblings had dark eyes & hair. You & your grandmother look like all of my cousins. I was told that we were Cajun- Spanish and Indian. (I wish I could post pictures in the comments it would probably blow your mind)

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      That is so cool!

  • @myoniawilliams6664
    @myoniawilliams6664 Рік тому +3

    I’m a black woman in my 50’s and there was so many emotions and thoughts I experienced. Our ancestors passed for many reasons;
    -to do better for family or themselves
    -to get away from the hardship
    - some because they were taught and made to feel less than or not at all human beings as a black person.
    I understand those that feel it was wrong to pass and those that felt it was their way out. The fact is there was those who could not do this and those that wouldn’t even if they could because they wouldn’t dare leave their family behind. I also believe in either situation the darker skin felt hurt from all directions, (just saying lighter skin had an opportunity darker skin didn’t have whether it was taken or not) like the color of their skin, their humanity, and a whole system that painted them in such a damning treacherous light that all ran from the beauty of beautiful beings.
    No one upping here… just my thought that it is nuanced.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      I am so glad for this comment. I just saw it come through. This is the beginning of my journey, and I have so much to find out. I did get a chance to find and connect with my black cousins. They will be coming on here! Whatever the reason for passing, I am so grateful to be reconnecting with our family. It is a gift!

  • @verali164
    @verali164 Рік тому +5

    No one should be ashamed of their skin colour,

    • @TDS927
      @TDS927 Рік тому +1

      Exactly!

  • @cathyvaughan5092
    @cathyvaughan5092 Рік тому

    Throughout the beginning of this search I saw other relatives of yours but midway they wasn't seen nor heard of anymore,what happened? Beautiful story heartbreaking but but now you know and I'm pretty sure you have cousins out there as well. Wish you more luck don't give up and be proud of who you are and where it all started 😘❤️❤️❤️

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Glad to have you here, Cathy!

  • @teta6244
    @teta6244 Рік тому +1

    I am glad you are doing this for yourself & family, we all should know where we came from. I was lied to about my heritage, had a medical dna test done for a study & they called me asking if I was adopted..... figured out that I am native Jewish North African. I think many people lied to protect their future family from prejudice. They wanted to give us more opportunity & thought they were doing whats best for the next generation

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Im so glad you found the channel!!

  • @lisakoehler1719
    @lisakoehler1719 Рік тому +5

    Our family is the same. We have found documentation of my GGGgrandmother buying her 2 sons out of slavery in Natchitoches LA in 1854. Then we find them in Waco TX in 1870 under a different name (Flores). Before the purchase paperwork was found we were always told it wasn't really Flores but Lafleur (french canadian). We did a DNA test. It seems we have Nigerian somewhere. No french. You never know. People do what they have to to survive. Oh and no Spanish or Indian.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Lisa, this is an amazing story. Especially the very "obvious" hispanic last name. I think it makes a good point that we just can't make assumptions about people! If you end up finding the last name LaCour pop up...let me know, that's my family!

    • @lisakoehler1719
      @lisakoehler1719 Рік тому

      I should add the original last name while in LA was Poissot/Posso. Then it suddenly changed to Flores in Waco

  • @victoryalways
    @victoryalways Рік тому +5

    After watching this and seeing so many states still having slavery on the books. What is crazy to me is that Louisiana is the only state that folded to keep slavery on the books this past November 2022 this speaks volumes! I watched the movie passing very interesting movie but to hear you guys story is even more interesting! Just love 💕 who you are because you are created in his image no matter how you got here. Thanks for sharing your story!

    • @verenamaharajah6082
      @verenamaharajah6082 Рік тому

      What does ‘ Keeping slavery on the books’ mean? I hope it’s not what I think it means! Please explain.

    • @zoe._.1850
      @zoe._.1850 Рік тому

      What does “slavery on the books” mean? I’m not American

    • @victoryalways
      @victoryalways Рік тому +1

      @@verenamaharajah6082 It means for that state if they want to do slavery they can still do it.

    • @victoryalways
      @victoryalways Рік тому +1

      @@zoe._.1850 It means 5hey can keep doing slavery in that state even though federally it is against the law, but they wanted to keep people in slavery or should I say work for free.

    • @verenamaharajah6082
      @verenamaharajah6082 Рік тому +1

      Thank you for explaining that term. I am so shocked at its meaning. Surely there’s more to it than meets the eye? What kind of people think slavery is acceptable? I can’t comprehend it.

  • @denisehenry3427
    @denisehenry3427 Рік тому +1

    Nice story about your Grandma. I was told so many story like your grandmother. My husband have many family members that left home after high school moved to other states, and passed for white. It's about 4 or 5 generations,they were from New Orleans, La.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +3

      Thank you Denise for watching and sharing that----honestly, I am overwhelmed by how "not unique" our family story is.

    • @vanessapete1091
      @vanessapete1091 Рік тому +1

      Being in a creole family,from Louisiana,myself,it really isn't that unique at all .There are literally hundreds,thousands of stories like this.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      wow

    • @vanessapete1091
      @vanessapete1091 Рік тому +1

      @@nytn This all ties in with CRT that they're fighting tooth and nail against. Black people know about all of this. We Are this. We Live this. Most white people will lie,deny,or are just ignorant to to the facts. They don't want to hear the facts that there is no true real white person or really 100% black person. EVERYONE is mixed with SOMETHING .And all of this race mixing in America started by the white European slave masters raping and forced relations with their young slave girls. We're talking about old ass men. Atrocities that today,they would be put under the jail for.The Thomas Jeffersons and the George Washington's of the world and countless others .These so call"PATRIOTS "they look up to,who whine and b-tch when they take down a statue or a name off a school or building. These are THOSE people's ancestors that we're still dealing with today in freaking 2022! SMDH Lord have mercy. The stuff black people have endured. And we're still here. We a strong people. Mentally and physically. We've had to take so much. The white race wouldn't exist had they went through or experienced even a quarter what black folks been through. Heck,they barely made it through 1"summer of love ",as they like to call it.Try 400 years. Then we can talk. This is not directed at you. I'm talking in general terms. I think it's wonderful what you're doing. To bring awareness. Thank you for that.More people outside of Louisiana needs to know this.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому +2

      @@vanessapete1091 THANK YOU. This is American history. The American experience. I can promise you this, I have already begun teaching my (young) children their history. The cycle breaks with me in my family.

  • @aedhcnef6083
    @aedhcnef6083 8 місяців тому

    Is there a part 2?

  • @ToniGlick
    @ToniGlick Рік тому +4

    There are so many beautiful mixed race people in Louisiana. We should all be able to embrace every part our heritage freely and proudly. This gives our country so much depth and is one of things that makes us great.

    • @nytn
      @nytn  Рік тому

      Amen! I am so proud of this heritage, and I plan to make up for all the time we didnt know about it