George A. Priestley, PhD Ten minute talk at Encuentros/Encounters Race Relations Institute, Fisk University 2003
Un gran saludo a mis compañeros y compañeras de Nashville:

My sincerest thanks to the Race Relations Institute at Fisk, the Latin American Center at
Vanderbilt and all other co-organizers for inviting me to share some personal experiences
relative to our conversation on African-American and Latino relations.

As someone who is one hundred percent black and one hundred percent Latino, I believe
that I have some insights on the subject matter that Dr. Irma McClaurin has brought us
here to discuss. The speakers who preceded me spoke eloquently about the recent and
substantial arrival of Mexicans, Colombians, Central Americans and others to Tennessee.
In other words they focused on the tensions caused by recently arrived Latinos to the
state. Others spoke to the issue of stereotypes that African-Americans have of Latinos
and vice-versa. Yet, another speaker focused on the harmony that exists amongst Latinos,
whites and blacks, suggesting that there is no discrimination in Tennessee or at least in
Nashville.

All of the above descriptions, analyses and appreciations of the issues facing AfricanAmericans and Latinos are important starting points of this most exciting and necessary
conversation, but we must enrich our perspectives by grounding our views in ethnohistory, global politics and economics. This perspective has proved useful to me in
understanding issues of culture, race, and citizenship in the Republic of Panama. For
example, as a second generation Panamanian of West Indian descent, I understand how
the Latino emigrants feel in the midst of a country where English is the dominant

1
language; Protestantism, the dominant religion, and where race, color and ethnicity are
important social markers of exclusion. As a black person, I have experienced racism and
discrimination in the Republic of Panama and in the former segregated Canal Zone
controlled by the United States for most of the 20th century.

My immigrant grandparents and parents were Protestants, black and English-speakers in
the Republic of Panama, a country that was predominantly Catholic, mestizo, and
Spanish-speaking. Like other black folks in Latin America we were relegated to perform
work that nobody else wanted. But unlike our black brothers who spoke Spanish and
were Catholic, we were deemed “incompatible” with the Panamanian nation. Those who
read us out of the nation seldom alluded to race; they said it was our status as unwanted
immigrants and the labor competition that we posed for native Panamanians. Was any of
this true? Yes, the issue was very complex. It was about recently arrived immigrants and
about labor competition. But it was also one of race, culture and ethnicity. AfricanAmericans in Tennessee have to understand the immigrant experience to relate to
Latinos, and the latter must examine his/her racial understandings, especially as it
concerns black people, in order to enable better cultural and racial relations.

In our ongoing conversation on Latino-African American issues, we must ask ourselves
whether the issue is about Latino immigrants, cultural differences or race. I submit that it
is about all three, and while African-Americans must strive to understand the dynamics of
emigration and the plight of those moving to El Norte, the Latino/a immigrant will have
to confront his/her notion about the racial paradigms that he/she brings to Nashville and

2
how these notions hinder or foster social, cultural, economic and political relations with
African-Americans. Moreover, both groups should draw on the many models and
historical instances of cooperation between African-Americans and Latinos rather than on
the models of conflict, exacerbated by hysterical interpretations of the U.S. census and
stereotypes designed to sell commodities that artificially separate peoples that have much
in common.

Lastly, but not least important, we must add elements of global politics, political
economy and history into our conversation so as to make better sense of our local
situation. We must inquire how global economic, cultural and political forces impact the
rapidly changing demographics in Tennessee in order to understand how they affect each
and everyone one of you. This methodology has served me well in understanding my
own experience as an Afro-Panamanian.

For example, many of you know that President Theodore Roosevelt boasted “I took the
Canal…” but few of you may have asked what were the economic, political and strategic
factors that led to the president’s decision. Few might have asked what lay behind the
U.S. strategy to recruit over 50,000 West Indians over a ten year period (1904-1914) to
build the Panama Canal rather than hire unskilled labor in other markets, such as the U.S.
South, Spain, and China and so on. It is also important to inquire as to it impact that this
massive emigration had on the sending countries in the West Indies and on Panama’s
demographic profile, or how these cultural encounters affected race relations on the
Isthmus. These are important questions in there own right, but to fully answer them it was

3
necessary for me to see how they related to the U.S. economic and strategic plans for
constructing the Canal. I had to ask why was it necessary for the U.S. to subordinate
Panama economically, politically and culturally, while institutionalizing a Jim Crow set
of social relations in that 500sq.miles of territory that divided the nation, known
historically as the Panama Canal Zone.

Once these larger questions were posed, it was easier, although not less painful, to
understand the dynamics of immigration, discrimination and exclusion faced by the more
than 50,000 West Indians that traveled to Panama between 1904-1914 to “dig” the
Panama Canal; to comprehend the how and why they were trapped in low paying jobs in
the Canal Zone and super-exploited as immigrant workers; and as non-citizens of either
Panama or the United States, excluded from meaningful participation in the decisionmaking process in the Canal Zone as well as in Panama. Finally, their racial and national
exclusion intersected with racial discrimination in Panama and old-fashioned segregation
in the Canal Zone, making them victims of two different racial systems; one based on the
good old one- drop- rule imported from the United States and an equally perfidious
Panamanian/Latin American racial paradigm based on so-called race mixture, what my
colleague Alberto Barrow calls Crisol de Raza.

In conclusion in order for us/you to obtain a fuller understanding of the issues affecting
African American-Latino communities in the United States and particularly in Tennessee,
it is necessary to ask similar questions, large ones and smaller ones, and seek to
understand their interrelationship. We must also deploy an interdisciplinary perspective

4
(ethno-history, global politics and globalization) in our conversations, a heuristic device
to help us unveil the larger political, economic and cultural dynamics at work in
Tennessee that will inform our quest for greater solidarity between the two groups in
spite of color, race, nationality or immigrant status.

George Priestley, 19 April 2003

Prepared by the late Dr. George A. Priestley, founder of the Afrolatin@ Project and
Director of Latin American Studies, C.U.N.Y.-Queens College for the “EncuentrosEncounters” dialogue. Fisk University, April 19 2003.
© The Afrolatin@ Project. No reprints or republications without prior permission.

5

More Related Content

PDF
Insight News Developing Digital Agendas and Strategies for the Decade of Afro...
PPTX
CLASA past events fall 2018
PDF
March 2015 MRC Newsletter
PDF
2016 soba executive summary
PDF
Festering: Amrita Chakrabarti Myers on the wound of racism
PDF
Max VanBalgooy, "Ordinary People, Extraordinary Change" - Power of Great Stories
DOC
Exposure Experience
DOC
Colour Of Poverty Outreach 2 Pager ( May 2, 2008 )
Insight News Developing Digital Agendas and Strategies for the Decade of Afro...
CLASA past events fall 2018
March 2015 MRC Newsletter
2016 soba executive summary
Festering: Amrita Chakrabarti Myers on the wound of racism
Max VanBalgooy, "Ordinary People, Extraordinary Change" - Power of Great Stories
Exposure Experience
Colour Of Poverty Outreach 2 Pager ( May 2, 2008 )

What's hot (12)

PDF
Rural Minnesota Journal: Why Everyone Should Care
PPT
Our Cultural Journey
PDF
Diversity white paper-final
PDF
AWilson_finalunit_12-9-13 CTI
PDF
THE WHEEL SPEAKS ON 2013 - THE WHEEL SPEAKS ON 2013 - A Fool’s Paradise Re-Vi...
PDF
April 2015 MRC Newsletter
PDF
Arizona Student Suspended for Harassing Spanish Speakers Files Lawsuit | The...
DOCX
MPA Analytical GRANT
DOCX
Hispanic Immigrants’ Academic Achievement By Nationality
PDF
AOG - News Release & EA - FINAL
PDF
Gators for Free the Slaves biweekly newsletter
Rural Minnesota Journal: Why Everyone Should Care
Our Cultural Journey
Diversity white paper-final
AWilson_finalunit_12-9-13 CTI
THE WHEEL SPEAKS ON 2013 - THE WHEEL SPEAKS ON 2013 - A Fool’s Paradise Re-Vi...
April 2015 MRC Newsletter
Arizona Student Suspended for Harassing Spanish Speakers Files Lawsuit | The...
MPA Analytical GRANT
Hispanic Immigrants’ Academic Achievement By Nationality
AOG - News Release & EA - FINAL
Gators for Free the Slaves biweekly newsletter
Ad

Viewers also liked (8)

PPTX
Proyecto Afrolatin@- 2013 Lista de Eventos Notables Para Afrolatin@s
PPTX
Afrolatin@ Project- 2013 Year in Review / Resumen del Ano
PDF
Proclamación del ONU del Decenio de Afrodescendientes
PPT
Mobile Banking, MicroFinance and Economic Development in Latin America and th...
PDF
Programa de Actividades del Mes de la Etnia Negra Panamá 2014*
PDF
Afrodesc cuaderno 9: Reflections on Ethnicity and Nation in Belize -Shoman
PPTX
The Afrolatin@ Project 2013 List of Notable Events for Afrolatin@'s
PPTX
Latin American Independence
Proyecto Afrolatin@- 2013 Lista de Eventos Notables Para Afrolatin@s
Afrolatin@ Project- 2013 Year in Review / Resumen del Ano
Proclamación del ONU del Decenio de Afrodescendientes
Mobile Banking, MicroFinance and Economic Development in Latin America and th...
Programa de Actividades del Mes de la Etnia Negra Panamá 2014*
Afrodesc cuaderno 9: Reflections on Ethnicity and Nation in Belize -Shoman
The Afrolatin@ Project 2013 List of Notable Events for Afrolatin@'s
Latin American Independence
Ad

More from The_Afrolatino_Project (20)

PDF
George Westerman CV Date Unknown
PDF
Peloteros Panamenos en Beisbol de los EEUU George Westerman Panamá, Enero 1, ...
PDF
Interamerican Marriages on the Isthums of Panama J. Biesanz 1950
PDF
Un Grupo Minoritario en Panama George Westerman diciembre 1950
PDF
A Minority Group in Panama George Westerman December 1950
PDF
Estudios de los Conflictos en la Zona del Canal 1948
PDF
Panama Tribune West Indian History Review March 2, 1947
PDF
Hacia Una Mejor Comprension George Westerman 1946
PDF
Towards a better understanding George Westerman 1946
PDF
Richards invitiation letter from panamanian 1st lady to c richards 2005
PDF
Richards copy of official legislative entry law 9 2000
PDF
Richards letter of recognition from assoc of photographers of panama may 1964
PDF
Richards letter from min of agriculture denying jamaican immigrant based on l...
PDF
R ichards basketball team photo year unknown
PDF
Richards claral richards al baseball profesional ecos del valle dic 1960
PDF
R ichards baseball natl games clippings 2001
PDF
Afrodescendencia aproximaciones contemporáneas desde américa latina y el car...
PDF
Letter to Colombian Congress re Raizal ethnocide (San Andres) -signed without...
PDF
The Afrolatin@ Project Meeting March 31, 2006-April 1, 2006 Photos
PDF
Afrolatin@ Project
George Westerman CV Date Unknown
Peloteros Panamenos en Beisbol de los EEUU George Westerman Panamá, Enero 1, ...
Interamerican Marriages on the Isthums of Panama J. Biesanz 1950
Un Grupo Minoritario en Panama George Westerman diciembre 1950
A Minority Group in Panama George Westerman December 1950
Estudios de los Conflictos en la Zona del Canal 1948
Panama Tribune West Indian History Review March 2, 1947
Hacia Una Mejor Comprension George Westerman 1946
Towards a better understanding George Westerman 1946
Richards invitiation letter from panamanian 1st lady to c richards 2005
Richards copy of official legislative entry law 9 2000
Richards letter of recognition from assoc of photographers of panama may 1964
Richards letter from min of agriculture denying jamaican immigrant based on l...
R ichards basketball team photo year unknown
Richards claral richards al baseball profesional ecos del valle dic 1960
R ichards baseball natl games clippings 2001
Afrodescendencia aproximaciones contemporáneas desde américa latina y el car...
Letter to Colombian Congress re Raizal ethnocide (San Andres) -signed without...
The Afrolatin@ Project Meeting March 31, 2006-April 1, 2006 Photos
Afrolatin@ Project

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
White House fires CDC director who says RFK Jr. is "weaponizing public health"
PDF
THE BONA FIDE CHARACTER OF ANC LEADER BY COMRADE MATTHEWS BANTSIJANG
PDF
BRAZIL NEEDS TO OVERCOME ITS EXTERNAL DEPENDENCE TO EXERCISE ITS SOVEREIGNTY.pdf
PDF
GAZA STRIP: Famine confirmed in Gaza Governorate, projected to expand
PDF
CWTS-WK4-CitizenshipJ-Human-RightsJ-and-Volunteerism.pdf
PPTX
Thai Women Hosts Redefine Hospitality as Empowerment.
PDF
How-to-Make-India-Better-A-Vision-for-Holistic-Progress.pdf
PPTX
Thailand Fashion Week 2025 Set to Ignite Bangkok with Daring Spring-Summer 20...
PPTX
Political ideologies ann their values and characteristics
PPTX
Thailand and India Shine at PATA Travel Mart 2025 in Bangkok.
PDF
Public Attention on IRB System Problems: Key Trigger Explained
PDF
Houston City Life - Intown Magazine
PDF
Revitalising the North West Economy: Anchored on Mining, Farming and Tourism ...
PDF
Beyond the Buzz: Consumer Tech and Lifestyle Innovations
PPTX
Is Thailand Ready for Candela’s Eco-Friendly Hydrofoil Ferry_.
PDF
The Blogs_ Israel's Doctrine of Deterrence and Survival _ Andy Blumenthal _ T...
PPTX
Haitian Revolution presentation 1804 YO Z
PPTX
Concepts Used in Political Economy_Power Point-Lecture 3.pptx
PDF
30082025_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
DOCX
Coinography: Breaking Down the Latest Cryptocurrency and Bitcoin News
White House fires CDC director who says RFK Jr. is "weaponizing public health"
THE BONA FIDE CHARACTER OF ANC LEADER BY COMRADE MATTHEWS BANTSIJANG
BRAZIL NEEDS TO OVERCOME ITS EXTERNAL DEPENDENCE TO EXERCISE ITS SOVEREIGNTY.pdf
GAZA STRIP: Famine confirmed in Gaza Governorate, projected to expand
CWTS-WK4-CitizenshipJ-Human-RightsJ-and-Volunteerism.pdf
Thai Women Hosts Redefine Hospitality as Empowerment.
How-to-Make-India-Better-A-Vision-for-Holistic-Progress.pdf
Thailand Fashion Week 2025 Set to Ignite Bangkok with Daring Spring-Summer 20...
Political ideologies ann their values and characteristics
Thailand and India Shine at PATA Travel Mart 2025 in Bangkok.
Public Attention on IRB System Problems: Key Trigger Explained
Houston City Life - Intown Magazine
Revitalising the North West Economy: Anchored on Mining, Farming and Tourism ...
Beyond the Buzz: Consumer Tech and Lifestyle Innovations
Is Thailand Ready for Candela’s Eco-Friendly Hydrofoil Ferry_.
The Blogs_ Israel's Doctrine of Deterrence and Survival _ Andy Blumenthal _ T...
Haitian Revolution presentation 1804 YO Z
Concepts Used in Political Economy_Power Point-Lecture 3.pptx
30082025_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
Coinography: Breaking Down the Latest Cryptocurrency and Bitcoin News

George A. Priestley, PhD Ten minute talk at Encuentros/Encounters Race Relations Institute, Fisk University 2003

  • 2. Un gran saludo a mis compañeros y compañeras de Nashville: My sincerest thanks to the Race Relations Institute at Fisk, the Latin American Center at Vanderbilt and all other co-organizers for inviting me to share some personal experiences relative to our conversation on African-American and Latino relations. As someone who is one hundred percent black and one hundred percent Latino, I believe that I have some insights on the subject matter that Dr. Irma McClaurin has brought us here to discuss. The speakers who preceded me spoke eloquently about the recent and substantial arrival of Mexicans, Colombians, Central Americans and others to Tennessee. In other words they focused on the tensions caused by recently arrived Latinos to the state. Others spoke to the issue of stereotypes that African-Americans have of Latinos and vice-versa. Yet, another speaker focused on the harmony that exists amongst Latinos, whites and blacks, suggesting that there is no discrimination in Tennessee or at least in Nashville. All of the above descriptions, analyses and appreciations of the issues facing AfricanAmericans and Latinos are important starting points of this most exciting and necessary conversation, but we must enrich our perspectives by grounding our views in ethnohistory, global politics and economics. This perspective has proved useful to me in understanding issues of culture, race, and citizenship in the Republic of Panama. For example, as a second generation Panamanian of West Indian descent, I understand how the Latino emigrants feel in the midst of a country where English is the dominant 1
  • 3. language; Protestantism, the dominant religion, and where race, color and ethnicity are important social markers of exclusion. As a black person, I have experienced racism and discrimination in the Republic of Panama and in the former segregated Canal Zone controlled by the United States for most of the 20th century. My immigrant grandparents and parents were Protestants, black and English-speakers in the Republic of Panama, a country that was predominantly Catholic, mestizo, and Spanish-speaking. Like other black folks in Latin America we were relegated to perform work that nobody else wanted. But unlike our black brothers who spoke Spanish and were Catholic, we were deemed “incompatible” with the Panamanian nation. Those who read us out of the nation seldom alluded to race; they said it was our status as unwanted immigrants and the labor competition that we posed for native Panamanians. Was any of this true? Yes, the issue was very complex. It was about recently arrived immigrants and about labor competition. But it was also one of race, culture and ethnicity. AfricanAmericans in Tennessee have to understand the immigrant experience to relate to Latinos, and the latter must examine his/her racial understandings, especially as it concerns black people, in order to enable better cultural and racial relations. In our ongoing conversation on Latino-African American issues, we must ask ourselves whether the issue is about Latino immigrants, cultural differences or race. I submit that it is about all three, and while African-Americans must strive to understand the dynamics of emigration and the plight of those moving to El Norte, the Latino/a immigrant will have to confront his/her notion about the racial paradigms that he/she brings to Nashville and 2
  • 4. how these notions hinder or foster social, cultural, economic and political relations with African-Americans. Moreover, both groups should draw on the many models and historical instances of cooperation between African-Americans and Latinos rather than on the models of conflict, exacerbated by hysterical interpretations of the U.S. census and stereotypes designed to sell commodities that artificially separate peoples that have much in common. Lastly, but not least important, we must add elements of global politics, political economy and history into our conversation so as to make better sense of our local situation. We must inquire how global economic, cultural and political forces impact the rapidly changing demographics in Tennessee in order to understand how they affect each and everyone one of you. This methodology has served me well in understanding my own experience as an Afro-Panamanian. For example, many of you know that President Theodore Roosevelt boasted “I took the Canal…” but few of you may have asked what were the economic, political and strategic factors that led to the president’s decision. Few might have asked what lay behind the U.S. strategy to recruit over 50,000 West Indians over a ten year period (1904-1914) to build the Panama Canal rather than hire unskilled labor in other markets, such as the U.S. South, Spain, and China and so on. It is also important to inquire as to it impact that this massive emigration had on the sending countries in the West Indies and on Panama’s demographic profile, or how these cultural encounters affected race relations on the Isthmus. These are important questions in there own right, but to fully answer them it was 3
  • 5. necessary for me to see how they related to the U.S. economic and strategic plans for constructing the Canal. I had to ask why was it necessary for the U.S. to subordinate Panama economically, politically and culturally, while institutionalizing a Jim Crow set of social relations in that 500sq.miles of territory that divided the nation, known historically as the Panama Canal Zone. Once these larger questions were posed, it was easier, although not less painful, to understand the dynamics of immigration, discrimination and exclusion faced by the more than 50,000 West Indians that traveled to Panama between 1904-1914 to “dig” the Panama Canal; to comprehend the how and why they were trapped in low paying jobs in the Canal Zone and super-exploited as immigrant workers; and as non-citizens of either Panama or the United States, excluded from meaningful participation in the decisionmaking process in the Canal Zone as well as in Panama. Finally, their racial and national exclusion intersected with racial discrimination in Panama and old-fashioned segregation in the Canal Zone, making them victims of two different racial systems; one based on the good old one- drop- rule imported from the United States and an equally perfidious Panamanian/Latin American racial paradigm based on so-called race mixture, what my colleague Alberto Barrow calls Crisol de Raza. In conclusion in order for us/you to obtain a fuller understanding of the issues affecting African American-Latino communities in the United States and particularly in Tennessee, it is necessary to ask similar questions, large ones and smaller ones, and seek to understand their interrelationship. We must also deploy an interdisciplinary perspective 4
  • 6. (ethno-history, global politics and globalization) in our conversations, a heuristic device to help us unveil the larger political, economic and cultural dynamics at work in Tennessee that will inform our quest for greater solidarity between the two groups in spite of color, race, nationality or immigrant status. George Priestley, 19 April 2003 Prepared by the late Dr. George A. Priestley, founder of the Afrolatin@ Project and Director of Latin American Studies, C.U.N.Y.-Queens College for the “EncuentrosEncounters” dialogue. Fisk University, April 19 2003. © The Afrolatin@ Project. No reprints or republications without prior permission. 5