Wednesday, June 20, 2007

China and the "Black Man" (Pt. 2)

I've been receiving a lot of hits and feedback on my "China and the Black Man" post, so I thought I'd take this opportunity to better explain some things I said and to point out some new things as well. (For those of you who didn't read the original post, I talked about a popular toothpaste in China that was originally named "Darkie" and whose logo looks like a man in black face. China, I reasoned, needs to be more racially aware and sensitive, especially as it opens to the world and prepares for the Olympics. In any case, I recommend you read the first post it if you haven't already.)

Firstly, I should clarify that during my first few months in China, when I heard the word "niga" being spoken in Mandarin, the reason I was shocked was due to my own cultural and linguistic ignorance and also because of my connection to a country in which a similar sounding word, "nigger", is a a hateful and racist term. The fact that a completely innocuous word in a foreign language could cause such a reaction in me, especially when I didn't have any idea what the word meant, only proves how deeply ingrained issues of race are in the American consciousness. This misperception on my part says absolutely nothing about Chinese people, the Mandarin language, or about China as a whole.

A Chinese person commented on my original post that the term 黑鬼 (hei gui, literally "black devil") is the Mandarin equivalent of the English word "nigger". This is wrong, and actually, it couldn't be further from the truth. The phrase hei gui in Mandarin essentially means a bad, corrupt, or evil black person. While this certainly isn't a nice thing to call someone, it also doesn't carry any racist undertones. The Chinese have had very little contact with black people during their country's long history and thusly, they don't have many stereotypes or prejudices that are black specific. If you ask a modern day Chinese person to candidly tell you what they think of black people they'll probably say the following, "They all come from Africa and they all play basketball well." Not exactly PC or informed, but hardly bigoted.

Additionally, the term hei gui isn't reserved for black people alone and is sometimes used to describe bad people of different ethnicities. My Chinese teacher, Huang Laoshi, describes the ticket scalpers who lurk around train stations as hei gui even though they are in fact Chinese. The term hei gui is also interchangeable with the phrase hei xin, meaning black heart, which is similarly devoid of racial underpinnings. The person who commented on my original post went on to list some country specific insults like
俄国老毛子, meaning a Russian devil . He noted that these terms, including hei gui, are often said lightly, and, I assume, without hate. In fact, he called these terms nicknames.

The only Mandarin phrase I know of that is hateful and racist the way in which the N-word is, is the final term the commenter listed,
日本鬼子, meaning a Japanese devil. In fact, the commenter said that this phrase isn't a nickname, although he didn't elaborate further. There is a lot of anti-Japanese sentiment in China (which I will discuss later), and with this sentiment comes deep seated hatred that in some ways parallels racial tensions in America. Yet, to assume that a term like hei gui has a similar meaning to the word "nigger", is to make a big leap. In some ways, making this assumption is choosing a willful ignorance that permits or justifies the usage of American-bred racist jargon and imagery without understanding the real implications of doing so. After all, it's just a nickname, right?

There is no equivalent or synonymous word in Mandarin that means anything close to what the word "nigger" implies in English. There simply couldn't be. China was never involved in the African slave trade, and the Chinese never enslaved, debased, or dehumanized Africans on their soil. And therefor, the Mandarin language doesn't have any word that carries the hatred toward blacks that is contained within the N-word. In English, the word "nigger" doesn't simply mean a bad black person, instead, the word carries with it the loaded connotations and history of a land embroiled in the systemic subjugation and degradation of an entire people. It is a word that was created on the broken backs and shattered hearts of a people torn from their homes; a word that devalues another human as property to be owned and used; a word that says that those with darker skin are inherently lessor and without souls. It is a word that carries with it the tears, losses and victories of the civil rights movement in America. It is a word that, to this day in America, has the power to cause hurt and suffering greater than any knife can inflict. The legacy and usage of the N-word is entirely America's burden to bear and there is no single word in Mandarin that means anything similar.


If nothing else, my original post was a plea for Chinese people to try to be more sensitive toward racial differences and to look outside their own experiences and history to understand why the usage of racist iconography for product marketing like Darlie toothpaste is wrong and immoral. I wouldn't expect any Chinese person offhand to know why the term "darkie" or an image of a man in black face are so demeaning. But, I have a huge problem with any company or person who would willingly co-opt racist imagery from another country without first doing a little research to understand the history and potential impact of said imagery. One, that's a terrible business practice and is bound to cause a public relations blowout at some point, and two, it's a plainly immoral and irresponsible way to market a product. If you're going to borrow imagery from another country or culture, you should understand exactly what that imagery means. The makers of Darkie toothpaste apparently, and hopefully, didn't do that research and they ended up using a stereotyped and racist image and term for their product.


The name Darkie toothpaste was changed to "Darlie Toothpaste" in 1985 after the company was bought out by Colgate-Palmolive in 1985, and the incredibly offensive image on the package was downgraded to a less jarring image. However, to this day the image on the front of Darlie toothpaste appears to be Al Jolson in black face, and that is plainly inexcusable.

To help put this into perspective, imagine for a moment that an American company journeyed to Japan and borrowed a grossly stereotyped and offensive image of a Chinese woman (I don't actually know whether or not such imagery exists) and used this image on a product sold in America called "Comfort Women Panties." [A quick history lesson for those who don't know: During WWII, the Japanese invaded mainland China and forced thousands of Chinese women into prostitution to keep their troops happy as they tore through the land. Many of these women were mere teenagers when they were abducted, and they were treated like animals by the Japanese. They were repeatedly raped and gang-raped, tortured, and often killed after their bodies were wrecked by such abuses. Many of the Chinese women who survived this torture became sterile. The Japanese called these Chinese sex slaves their "comfort women."]

Trying to imagine the immoral usage of the term "comfort women" along with a racist image of a Chinese woman to market a product in America exposes just why Darlie toothpaste is so offensive. Chinese-Americans and Asian-Americans would never allow such a product to remain on the shelves, as well they shouldn't. The immorality wouldn't be lessoned if the company took a play from the Darlie handbook and changed the product name to "Comfortable Women Panties" but retained the racist image. It would still be inexcusable, racist, and a blight on American society. This is the closest parallel I can think of to compare Darlie toothpaste in China to a similar product in the west.

All I'm asking is for people, whether Chinese, American, black or white, to look outside of their own sphere and try to understand and empathize with others. This isn't being overly sensitive; it's being human and caring about your fellow man. Whether or not you can personally understand why an image or word has the power to harm, you should at least try to understand the pain and suffering it causes another. Is it really right to sell a product on the blood and tears of a people unlike yourself? I hope the answer for everyone is a resounding no.

11 comments:

Icarus said...

Zach, as an expatriate teacher who helps the Chinese people prepare themselves for the world, your concern for the global outlook of the Chinese is commendable. But I have to disagree with you on the case of Darlie toothpaste. If a person saw the toothpaste package for the first time, and was unaware of its history, I doubt he would construe the monochrome image to be that of a black man's. I think it's your exposure to the history of the toothpaste brand, along with the fact that you come from a civilisation whose roots are entangled in the murky business of slave trade, which makes your thoughts essentially biased against it. Besides, I don't think a multinational corporation like Colgate-Palmolive would risk something politically incorrect, even if it is China.

As for the Chinese not having contact with blacks, there are many resources on the Internet which provide information on the slave trade that the Arabs and the Chinese had going, involving Africans. Of course, that is not pertinent today, as it has all been forgotten over time, and even the Mandarin words associated with the slave trade which were used then, must have been forgotten or taken on entirely different meanings.

Anonymous said...

Zach this reminds me of the story of Cameron Diaz recently wearing an offensive purse to Peru and it pissed off alot of people. She's just walking around willy nilly with this good-looking bag that has Chinese characters on it but had no clue what it said.

Anonymous said...

Chinese tend to have a victim mentality, which they believe they can never be a racist or other types of bully. They would probably laugh it off after you have explained this offensive historical background to the black people. Chinese are also mistrustful. If they don't understand or don't think like you, you would ofentimes disregard your view.

Anonymous said...

Going in the other direction, when people from the PRC arrive in the USA, they consistently exhibit a strong racism towards a wide variety of racial groups.

I don't think this means they are inherently racist. It just means that they were raised in a homogeneous society, and are quick to draw conclusions based on small numbers of people.
Without having been taught to either not draw such conclusions or not vocalize them, the result is that people from the PRC frequently say things that horrify Americans.

90% of the time when this happens, the Americans are too stunned to say anything (the result being that the behavior goes uncorrected and gets repeated).

When I try to correct the behavior, I consistently am given a justification that the stereotype in question is correct (Black, Indian and Japanese people have most often been the target).

Once informed that this is serious behavior that can have very negative consequences, I find that PRC folk have an easy time not communicating these thoughts, but a difficult time not thinking them in the first place.

In general, drawing conclusions based on small sample sizes and based on the opinions of others is a sound strategy. It is difficult to teach people to ignore this strategy when it comes to issues of race.

Anonymous said...

Why hadn't anybody thought of the possibility that the Chinese simply admired the blacks for their wonderful teeth and used the image to help sell toothpaste? It was never that complicated in the first place. The blacks should be happy that their beautiful smiles are so admired that even the Chinese want to look like them, hence the toothpaste brand bearing the image of an African man enjoys phenomenal sales.

Anonymous said...

I don't know, a friend of mine from Mainland China told me that "hei gui" actually was the equivalent of "nigger", and would use it as a play on my actual name from time to time as "hey" and the "gui" (in his accent) could be made to sound like "hey (my name)!" I didn't take offense since he was just being silly, but I do recall that he expressly said that was what it meant.

I believe that Korean has a similar expression.

Anonymous said...

Zach wrote:

"A Chinese person commented on my original post that the term 黑鬼 (hei gui, literally "black devil") is the Mandarin equivalent of the English word "nigger". This is wrong, and actually, it couldn't be further from the truth. The phrase hei gui in Mandarin essentially means a bad, corrupt, or evil black person. While this certainly isn't a nice thing to call someone, it also doesn't carry any racist undertones."

Unfortunately, you're very wrong, Zach. My comment here would seem rather belated considering that your post, "China & the 'Black Man' Pt. II," was published on your blog in 2007. It is now 2010, and here I am only now responding. Weird, no? Well, not entirely, because I had an experience today that speaks to what you published 3 years ago. Here's the story:
I am a visibly black (i.e., dark-skinned) Haitian-American woman. I also speak fluent Mandarin-Chinese. I walked into a Chinese restaurant in Cambridge, MA today and had to hear the host refer to me as the "hei gui" who just walked in. The host was apprising a waitress of my arrival, and she chose to describe me as the "hei gui." Why do you think that is, Zach? I swear to you that I am not an evil black person. Even my friends and acquaintances can attest to this honorable self-assessment of mine. I have never been to this restaurant. Neither the host nor the waitress knows me. So how can they have determined so easily and haphazardly that I was a "bad," "corrupt," or "evil black person?"
How can you say that "hei gui" does not carry racist undertones when the only thing that elicited the necessity or desire to use that phrase was my black presence -- was my black face? I think you should have listened to the Chinese person who commented on your blog about the difference between "hei ren" and "hei gui." In other words, you should practice what you preach. You should show at least some modicum of humility when you speak about a culture of people and their cultural practices and when you authorize yourself to advise them to be more sensitive to others.
This is all to say that my being called a "hei gui" stung today. Before I stormed out of the restaurant in complete shock and anger, I actually told the host exactly how I felt (in Mandarin-Chinese), and she kept saying "I'm sorry" profusely. The Chinese commenter was right. YOU, on the other hand, were the one who was/is wrong. Call me "hei ren" all you want, because -- hey -- that's what I am. But "hei gui?" Nope. I don't think so.

Zach said...

Hi Della, thanks for reading my blog and for taking the time to leave a comment!

I'm sorry to hear about what happened to you, and yes, by all looks of it, it seems that whoever called you "hei gui" was using it in a racist context. In my response to previous comments, I certainly didn't mean to come across as an apologist for any racists out there.

However, I would also argue that your experience was fundamentally different from what I am addressing because you witnessed this event take place in America, while my blog entry was only meant to address my perception of race relations within mainland China. Without knowing the person who said that to you, it is impossible for me to know their background, such as whether they have lived in the US for a long time, were born there, or recently immigrated. In any case, I would argue that the person who said that to you was a unique product of their environment, living and working in the United States. As in, if you move to, or were born in a country with deep racial tensions such as the US (and especially to a city like Boston that has such a fiery history of race clashes, not to mention ongoing neighborhood segregation), then perhaps you too will absorb those things if your character is weak or flawed.

The sad truth is that there are racist and prejudiced people all over the world. However, during my four years living in China, I have seen very little of what I would term "racism" towards blacks, at least, not in the same sense that white Americans are sometimes prejudiced against blacks. This, of course, doesn't mean that racism towards blacks doesn't exist here. And, of course, my experiences here are limited in scale, so I can only comment on what I personally witness, which might be a very small piece of the overall pie. Instead, what I've witnessed in China are many instances of what I would term cultural ignorance, that, to a westerner such as myself, might appear outwardly racist (Darlie toothpaste is a prime example).

In any case, you are very right that I am merely an outsider trying to examine and address things I witness in a different culture. In the future (as soon as I begin posting again), I will try my best not to draw conclusions about a whole culture, or linguistic phenomenon, based on my own limited knowledge and experience.

Anonymous said...

People need to be less sensitive about issues of race.

There is nothing essentially wrong with racism, and if blacks are offended, they can stay out of my country. In fact, I hope they all stay out of my country. I do not welcome internationalism and multiculturalism, and neither do most other Chinese.

Already there is ethnic tension between the Han majority and ethnic minorties that are native to the Chinese mainland? What do you think will happen when more and more foreigners come to China? Just look at the African riot in guangdong. If China hopes to remain intact, then it must remain monoethnic.

I do not want China to go down the same path as white countries, where mass immigration of blacks and arabs is suffocating the native culture.

Xenophobia is self-preservation.

Chris said...

Anonymous, people like you are what is damaging the world, not multi-ethnic countries or immigration. This type of ignorance is a cancer that is eating away at our society. Let's not forget that the "white americans" were themselves immigrants who came into a new land and nearly wiped out an entire race of people, so if you are really that against immigration, then you should follow your own advice and go back to whatever European country your family immigrated from.

D said...

I agree, people like you Anonymous are the type of people that holds back the modern progress to full racial tolerance of all people.

Now keep your ass in KKK where such views are accepted and leave us forward-thinkers alone.