I’m a 28-year-old Negro.
If you’re looking at your screen with a perplexed expression, that was the same reaction I had when I read that the Census still has the term “Negro” on their 2010 questionnaire. The last time I participated in the Census, there was a guy strolling through the dorms to get college kids‘ responses, but for the life of me, I don’t recall him asking me if I was “Black, African-American or Negro.” If he did, I’d have probably thought he was trying to be funny and slammed the door.
But according to BlackVoices.com, more than 56,000 people filled in the blank line for race category with the term “Negro.” I didn’t even know people used the word. My 97-year-old great great aunt has always called herself black and Creole. My 87-year-old grandfather likes to rile me up by calling me “colored,” but for the most part he says black or African-American.
As far as I can tell, the term “Negro” stopped being used in the ’50s so why the Census is still using it today is just plain ironic. The purpose of the Census is to get up-to-date information on the people living in our world, but they’re using outdated terms to do it. Isn’t that a little hypocritical?
BlackVoices.com does have a point about those who aren’t really comfortable calling themselves African-Americans when they don’t know squat about
I more commonly say I’m black, mainly because I dug the whole “Black and I’m Proud” era with afros, fighting for civil rights, the original purpose of the Black Panther Party and the entire era of black literature, music and business becoming more visible. I’m fascinated with Black Wall Street, a neighborhood full of black millionaires who made it against the odds.
I’ve heard differing debates about whether black people created the term African-American and those who flat out refuse to call themselves American because their ancestors weren’t brought here willingly. I always find the latter debate odd because as much as these same people protest
I can understand using the term “Negro” when reading literature or referring to a time in history (ex. Negro History Week as opposed to Black History Month), but I have a problem with selecting an outdated term like “Negro” on the Census report.