Top

music

Stories

 

The N-Word Is Flourishing Among Generation Hip-Hop Latinos

Why should we care now?

"Yo, my nigga, that nigga's crazy," declares a young Dominican guy in his late teens, early twenties. "Yeah, my nigga, that nigga was buggin' last night, my nigga," responds another hermano. Chatter like this floated in the air like the whiff of days-old garbage smoldering in the heat while I took my frequent summer jaunts along Vermilyea Avenue way uptown in Inwood, with my 11-year-old daughter in tow.

AZ (left) presents his thesis.
Jackie O
AZ (left) presents his thesis.

Related Content

More About

Like this Story?

Sign up for the Music Newsletter: (Sent out every Thursday) Keep your thumb on the local music scene with music features, additional online music listings and show picks. We'll also send special ticket offers and music promotions available only to our Music Newsletter subscribers.

Privacy Policy

Initially, you'd find mostly Caribbean Latinos dropping n-bombs into rap lyrics—"Pigs," off Cypress Hill's classic self-titled 1991 debut, is just one example—but nearly two decades later, the profusion of the word into the New York City Latino vocabulary is reaching an almost caricaturist quality. In Spanish Harlem, el Bronx, and the Lower East Side, it's enthusiastically deployed in an almost faddish manner, as if it's going out of style literally tomorrow. With Nas threatening to name his latest album Nigga (he relented, eventually, but most fans still call it that anyway) a few months ago, and iconic Latino artists from the authentic urban native Fat Joe to one of my favorite internationalists, Immortal Technique, still flinging it about freely, the word, its meaning, and our sense of who can and cannot use it still dominates public conversation. The palpable racial tension that's been rearing its head this historic presidential election, the subject of race and who is truly considered black or white in this black-and-white race, is something Latinos need to pay attention to. For many of us, especially those of Caribbean descent who make up a sizable chunk of New York Latinos, race should matter, and so should that one particular word.

Personal feelings, premonitions, and politics aside, I took the two young boys' exchange as an interesting opportunity, an exercise in thinking about Afro-Latino identity in an unlikely way: through a hip-hop lens. Aside from the fact that we're in the thick of a predominantly Dominican enclave (for now) in our beloved Uptown Manhattan, and the first guy I'd overheard wore an oversized white T-shirt emblazoned with our motherland's flag, homeboy could've passed for an African-American man on any other stretch of blocks stateside. By comparison, his comrade looked more like Fat Joe's skinnier brother, with light eyes and pale skin. Was it OK, or more OK, for the darker-skinned kid to use the term?

As many times as I've heard it yelled across the streets and in playgrounds lately, it doesn't take away the sting. But it's naive to think Puerto Rican, Dominican, and Cuban kids in New York City aren't calling each other and themselves the n-word, especially in 2008. (It's a global phenomenon, too: In West African cities like Freetown and Accra, heads that find out you're from the States and part of the hip-hop community will find creative ways to work the word into a conversation.) For us, the word usually surfaces in the same context that arises among young African-Americans: as a term of inclusion and solidarity. "It's just a code of communication to us, a 'hood word people throw around frequently," says half-African-American, half-Dominican rapper AZ, who released his "rap thesis" on the subject, titled N.4.L. (Niggaz 4 Life), last month. "I guess people want to use it now for press and all that; I don't understand what's all the big fuss about."

Somehow, the n-word has found its way back into hip-hop's critical zeitgeist: I'm interested in exploring, as a Dominican New Yorker, how we as a community have propagated it. Recently, due to the mounting criticism of Boricua rapper Fat Joe's use of the term eight albums deep into his career (including his latest, The Elephant in the Room), Latinos are being challenged to introspect. But I can see why an impulse to laser-focus on the issue now would bewilder a veteran rapper like Joe; he's used the word consistently since emerging in 1993, as have the Beatnuts, Hurricane G, and his late Puerto Rican cohort Big Pun, to name a few. In an interview with Chicago-based WGCI radio personality Leon Rogers, Joe said that while he didn't know exactly when Latinos started using the n-word, he felt that "somehow it became a way to embrace each other." He added: "Crazy shit is, my man Reverend Al Sharpton, whenever I see him, he'll be like, 'Wassup Joe, my nigga,' and he's the dude that protests 'my nigga.' He's my friend, so he says it to me as a term of endearment."

"It draws the racial differentiations into the Latino community, which I agree with," says New York University Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis, Juan Flores, who regularly teaches courses on Afro-Latino identity here and abroad. "It's just an opportunity to check the power that Black Latinos reflect off each other and the Latino population." In other words, Latino artists use the n-word as a reminder that they too have been oppressed and are products of the transatlantic slave trade.

There may be a reason for the lack of attention: Many Caribbean Latinos are, to Americans at least, ethnically ambiguous products of miscegenation. Regardless of what we've learned in grade school, our history extends past Columbus and our Spanish conquistadores. "The European Spaniards have left a legacy of self-hatred and racism among the Latino population; without acknowledging that, we will not evolve past our own inequity," says Immortal Technique, an Afro-Peruvian hip-hop artist who also uses the n-word. "Racism in America, as horrible and ugly as it may be, still isn't as bad as what it is in Latin America, and the sad part is that we are being racist against ourselves."

1 | 2 | Next Page >>
 
  • Buenazo 11/24/2010 2:13:00 PM

    "Racism in America, as horrible and ugly as it may be, still isn't as bad as what it is in Latin America, and the sad part is that we are being racist against ourselves." "The similar term cocolo—most popularly used as an insult against Haitians by Dominicans" The above quote which was spoken by a peruvian more than likely applies more in the country of peru. His experiences forces him to mention that latin america has this issue of racism which i am not denying. Lets face it though you cannot compare racism in south america to racism in the carribean. To say that racism in Latin america is worse than in america is hogwash and deserves no merit. Its like comparing an ant to an elephant which is foolish to say the least. Now the term cocolo being used as an insult to haitians is also not accurate when the term cocolos refer to the people of san pedro de macoris. The blacks of that region mostly are decendants from the english speaking islands st kitts st croix ect...Raquel please do your homework on the Dominican republic. The term Negro is used loosly when refering to haitians.

  • simone 08/01/2010 10:07:00 PM

    article

  • googler 12/02/2008 11:06:00 PM

    google

  • k 12/02/2008 6:07:00 PM

    its a stupid word to use and everyone always makes such a fuss over it....btw, i really hate how Latino culture is ALWAYS automatically associated with hip-hop culture. it drives me crazy! im a proud Latina but i f'n hate hip-hop, rap, and especially reggaeton!...

  • otrain 11/30/2008 9:11:00 AM

    im amazed at how much the latino kids in NY say nigga. it ridiculous. the desire to shoehorn it into every sentence indicates they desperately enjoy the privilege of using the word, and want to embrace the coolness of downtrodden status. like a white hip hop fan who just got a pass to use it for a limited time only. the word has a positive aspect as an expression of brotherhood, but on balance it hurts the user. economic and social mobility in america may be exceptions, but they are not myths. they do happen. and accepting for yourself the "nigga" label is like saying "im one of people who are kept down". drilling that message into your own head all day every day is like kicking yourself when nobody else is around to do it.

  • Lorenzo 11/28/2008 4:53:00 PM

    The N-word is not a term of endearment. It's an offensive word designed to sting --- even if it's supposedly a friendly jab. Whether it's used by African-Americans or mixed-race Hispanics, it is an expression of racial, color and ethnic self-hatred. Of all the comments Raquel Cepeda got, I share Cara's insight. Rationalizing that the N-word is an OK word is psychologially sick. This is a word the Europeans pinned on slaves to draw a distinction between those they considered naked heathen lazy beasts and the industrious intelligent Christians ordained by God to conquer all peoples of a darker hue. The rampant use of the N-word really is a triumph --- for Europeans. It's direct evidence that white is winning the color war. Blacks and Caribispanics are all "color struck," a word invented by Zora Neale Hurston to mean shadeism or discrimination based how brown or black a person is. Many descendants of Africans brought to The New World are pshchologically conditioned to believe that there was/is something wrong with Black. It's a fact of life in creolized cultures. People are encouraged to breed children as close to white as possible and are scorned for kids coming out too negroid. They spend a lot of time suppressing African traits. (The Miami Herald did a great series on this phenomenon last year.) The self-loathing is rampant and tragic all over, not just among New York Blacks and Latinos. The N-word is one manifestation of it. Here's what I think is happening in New York: mixed-race Hispanics don't feel encumbered by the one-drop rule and definitely don't want to be mistaken for Black Americans. But the irony is that they use the N-word as if they were indeed self-hating African-Americans. Another ironic twist is that African-Americans here, who have black cousins whiter than some Hispanics, are conditioned by the one-drop rule to see mixed-race Hispanics as kin --- even though they don't want to be. ("I may be dark by white standards, but I ain't you, muchacho!") It's the combination of the ghetto pass and the genetic overlap that makes the N-word seem less innocuous when used by mixed-race Latinos. But it's more like mi esclavo than mi amigo . Here in the city, they tend to share the same impoverished living conditions, until education and better incomes open their eyes to the inappropriatenss of the N-word. I'm convinced that there is a lot of self-hatred, scorn, denial --- and condescension --- fueling the N-word explosion that prompted Raquel's keen observations. The Dominican Republic has serious color issues. Its people are raised to fear the threat of extreme blackness invading the gene pool. Trujillo slaughtered 10,000 Haitians for that reason. And the New York Times wrote last year about the continuous human rights violations and physical attacks on black Haitians who overstay the cane harvest. All over South America, too, the blacker African descendants have made the least social progress in the four centuries of the African diaspora. They have only a small fraction of the benefits that African-Americans in the US expected to enjoy even before the greatest gains that grew from the civil rights movement. It's tragic that Black and Brown people in America are being conditioned to accept an insult as entertainment or endearment. It leaves the door open for continued hatred and disrespect in a culture where we are still struggling for equal treatment.

  • Shake 11/28/2008 9:31:00 AM

    It's a damn word. Its obnly demeaning if you WANT it to be. Put it this way:gay meant happy. Over time, it's become an insult to heterosexual men. Hell, and nowadays, kids don't even use it as a way of stating someones sexuality. Now its become synonymous with "sucks" "That games gay" "This is gay" etc. Words are words, and their meanings change over time. Punk became a street kid. Gay became "sucks" or "shitty". Nigga is now the new "bro" or "dude".

  • Frans Nijs 11/24/2008 5:46:00 PM

    And they always told us, blanks, we were the racists!

  • ali 11/20/2008 10:32:00 PM

    i think dominicans are soo racists. they say the n word trying to be cool but when you get them to conversate about black you find that they possess a very negative view on blackness. black aint beautiful to carribean hispanics. i guess what i mean to say is that they are phony and prejudice.

  • Nena Bay 11/19/2008 1:19:00 AM

    The fact that Cubans, Dominicans, and Puerto Ricans are using the term "nigga" isn`t new and I don`t think it ever was. Everyone in Caribbean has African decent and I see it that way. I`m mixed with Black, Dominican, and Puerto Rican and it doesn`t bother me at all although I am called a nigga at times. When it`s other Latinos doing it, it`s not taken as well because they`re closer to being pure Spanish than Caribbean Latinos.

  • Nena Bay 11/19/2008 1:18:00 AM

    The fact that Cubans, Dominicans, and Puerto Ricans are using the term "nigga" isn`t new and I don`t think it ever was. Everyone in Caribbean has African decent and I see it that way. I`m mixed with Black, Dominican, and Puerto Rican and it doesn`t bother me at all although I am called a nigga at times. When it`s other Latinos doing it, it`s not taken as well because they`re closer to being pure Spanish than Caribbean Latinos.

  • thescoop 11/18/2008 9:12:00 AM

    Black America and the N-word: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dP2U0jmZjec

  • mark tillman 11/16/2008 2:03:00 AM

    So if the cop who caught OJ had only been an Afro-American or Afro-Dominican American or Afro-Latino-American or Afro-Carribbean American, he could have said "nigga" and Simpson would have been convicted of murdering the two people he murdered? Cool...

  • 11/15/2008 4:38:00 AM

    I don't care if it is an African American, or an African who uses the N word... It is like "kicking oneself in the ego, in the 'essence", .. and, therefore, should NOT be seen as a cool term to use. You don't see Asians calling themselves "gooks", or chinks, or japs,,etc. You don't see whites calling themself honky, or whitey. You don't see Latins doing the same... It is like "pooping" on one's own heritage, no matter how humorous the manner of saying " Niggaaahhhh", or whatever. Not hip.

  • 11/15/2008 4:34:00 AM

    I don't care if it is an African American, or an African who uses the N word... It is like "kicking oneself in the ego, in the 'essence", .. and, therefore, should NOT be seen as a cool term to use. You don't see Asians calling themselves "gooks", or chinks, or japs,,etc. You don't see whites calling themself honky, or whitey. You don't see Latins doing the same... It is like "pooping" on one's own heritage, no matter how humorous the manner of saying " Niggaaahhhh", or whatever. Not hip.

  • Michael 11/15/2008 4:05:00 AM

    I don't care who uses the N-word, how they spin it, what new interpretation they have for it or how much money they make from it- use of the word marks one as a practitioner of the same old slavery ways. People are going to say what they want, or what they know. But recognize it for what it is- the new shuffle and grin, no matter how it's dressed up. Slavery ways!

  • Kilchis 11/14/2008 10:34:00 AM

    I was hoping that soon after this election that ethnic slurs would be passe'. I find them to be discomforting and disrespectful. If all that you have going for your identity is your ethnicity you're losing,and you don't have to anymore. If you want to cause people to feel uncomfortable,then you're even more pathetic,and although it may take some effort,you can do better than that.

  • che 11/13/2008 6:38:00 AM

    i think we confuse people. that's why people pick on j.lo...it's easier than confronting someone like fat joe or true life. we need more pieces like this. write on raquel cepeda. che

  • cara 11/12/2008 9:47:00 PM

    It's about time that someone in the media brought it up. I find the use of that word nauseating and reeking of self-hatred when used by black kids. If it doesn't mean anything anymore, why not also give the word spic a whirl. When I hear Latino kids use on the train, I want to know how they justify its use: does their 5%, 25%, 50% or 95% of African ancestry justify its use? What's the right percentage? It's even more interesting in a self-hating culture steeped in the worship of light skin and "Spanish" ancestry even among darker Latinos, be it of mixed ethnicity or worse of Amerindian descent. I guess things aren't any better in the New World where one is never quite white enough.

  • marcus angelet aka no-one 11/08/2008 9:32:00 PM

    i'm asking if i may send you some musical material to review you might find interesting me and my group sunsetstripbk(we have a myspace page the same name)currently are promoting a single called "nothing ass spic's" if interested i can be reached at 1-718-832-3601 and thank you for your time ms.r.cepeda and your article's which have been thought provoking and insightful

  • Steve 11/07/2008 8:57:00 PM

    That has to have been one of the best articles I have read in a very long time. Bravo and thank you for writing it.

  • Jesus Talks 11/06/2008 11:35:00 PM

    Great piece! The N-word is something that will unfortunately always be around. I'm a Latino who loves hip-hop but refuse to use the word. My black friends refuse to use it so why shouldn't I do the same? It's disgusting word.

  • Alberto O. Cappas 11/02/2008 11:07:00 PM

    A Rose in Spanish Harlem Three Characters in One � By Alberto O. Cappas There is a Rose in Spanish Harlem Hiding in exile until it becomes all clear A community Divided unto itself by itself with itself While other cultures make themselves at home We stay inside Like Lobsters in a barrow Managed by a social service over-dosed mindset Cultural Centers keeping Boricua in the past Preaching a strategy of outdated liberated emotions Perpetuated by poets with words that erase Possibilities of moving a new generation forward Colonial chains still in full operation A living electronic field of rappers and poets Adding confusion to the meaning A community consuming, not providing Electing misguided egos into public policy positions Cementing the fate with physical evidence: Babies coming from babies The young echoing the "N" word as a daily sweet diet Tattoos carved on human bodies transformed into walking billboards And slacks placed below the waist line as something very cool As the poet Pedro Pietri said, It is time to visit "Sister Lopez" again "The number one healer" And pray that the spirits Would heal and guide us out of Ignorance and bondage Giving us the wisdom to build A new Spanish Harlem And Liberate the Rose Rise Puerto Ricans Rise Puerto Ricans Rise! _______________________________ AOC is a published poet, author of several books of poems, including a self-help book, Never too late to make a U-turn: An Educational Pledge and 15 Questions to Self-Development. He is the founder of Nubian Speakers Bureau, Don Pedro Cookies, and www.aneducationalpledge.com website. AOC is also the director of Community Affairs for the New York City Human Resources Administration. AOC was the student leader that led to the development of Puerto Rican Studies at SUNYAB in 1971. During this same period, AOC was invited to Attica Prison as an Observer to help negotiate prison reform with Governor Rockefeller.

  • inwood represent 10/26/2008 1:09:00 AM

    right on Maria E. You obviously read the article and saw that Cepeda is trying to show that African-Americans and Latinos should start looking at one another with different lenses...they share history, a racial bond and most importantly, are more similar than different.

  • Maria E. 10/26/2008 12:50:00 AM

    Raquel Cepeda's article is great. Unfortunately despite all she wrote I guess it's necessary to point out to the people commenting on the article that many latinos are black. Many latinos in the US are black. Millions of latinos outside the Estados Unidos are black. There are more black latinos than African Americans if you combine the populations of all the black people in Latin America. People in the comments keep referring to Latinos as if there is a strict boundary between Latino and Black. Black is a broad racial category, African American is a national and ethnic category. Black and Latino do not cancel each other out, and some latinos even consider themselves African American too. Go figure.

  • Ian 10/25/2008 8:29:00 PM

    When I first moved to new york I was freaked out that some Latinos said nigga as much as blacks from my hometown. I very quickly realized that there was an Afro-latino culture in New York that I didn't quite understand yet.

  • inwood represent 10/25/2008 2:36:00 AM

    I couldn't agree with you more ms. cepeda...i live in inwood and am also dominican and i can't believe how flagrant folks are here with using the n-word. it's embarrassing, really.

  • yvette russell 10/25/2008 2:34:00 AM

    Mija, I hope readers caught the youth connections you made.The reality is that while the debate over the ownership and use of the n-word seems like an eternal rift(fess up, don't ya'll feel like it won't ever be erased from the global lexicon?) our proactive goal should be to intentionally expose adolescent youth to broader forms of expression. In my work at an after school media arts program in Central Harlem teens get to participate in a youth-centered environment where they address issues of diversity, activism and education through artistic formats (they have produced award-winning PSAs, a magazine, a show on MNN, a performance theater group). The outcome of art informing positive youth development and affording youth the ability to think critically about what they are exposed to? Young people are passing Regents, graduating high school, and going on to college at higher rates than city averages. More importantly they are less likely to resort to negative risk behaviors and are more likely to be good decision-makers. Do some of them use the n word when they're not in the program? Possibly. (Code switchin is real)Are some of them the very youth who have created emotionally gripping artistic expressions of their experiences? Maybe. Contradiction is fodder for "adolescentdom" but the groundwork is being laid for media-literate self-empowered young adults who won't need to fall back to using abusive idioms! A Puertorican Black Chica!

  • GINGER 10/25/2008 2:19:00 AM

    As a first generation Latin American immigrant, raised in the NYC of the 80s, 90s � yeah, the word still stings, it still sounds wrong to my ears. This brings so many issues to light in terms of how we are socialized, and yes - classism. During the 90s I was influenced by the so called �new age� movement, discovered my true spirituality through a deeper connection to my ancestors and their history, their struggles. Then I was given a West African culture / belief system, where amazing African Gods y Santos guide my existence to this day. Having experienced this and the powerful way words manifest in my life, I can�t image any benefits from including the �N� my vocabulary. More importantly, we now have little ones in our family and we are committed to protecting them as long as possible from the �N� word. Intellectually I understand how yougins use it for a sense of inclusion. Yet I hope they find other was of discovering themselves. When my beautiful 6 yr old niece, who is half African-American, tells me she doesn�t like the kinks in her hair; I jump at the opportunity to tell her why she has kinks, how she is a product of where she came from and how wonderful that is. The �N� word is not in that discussion. But someday, when she gets over the Disney channel, we will have to talk about the �N� word. Thanks Raquel, for encouraging us to think this through again. We are not who we were in the 80�s. Along the way we�ve been through 911, the hip hop generation has lost quite a few great ones to violence; and we�ve lived in an era of greed and individualism. In so many ways, these events have changed us all.

  • Yvette Russell 10/25/2008 12:04:00 AM

    Mija I hope readers caught the youth connections you made.The reality is that while the debate over the ownership and use of the n-word seems like an eternal rift (fess up, ya'll know the n word will transform but never be erased from the global lexicon) our proactive goal should be to intentionally expose adolescent youth to broader forms of expression. In my work at an after school media arts program in Central Harlem teens get to participate in a youth-centered environment where they address issues of diversity, activism and education through artistic formats (they have produced award-winning PSAs & documentaries, a seasonal magazine, a show on MNN, a performance theater group). The outcome of art informing positive youth development and affording youth the ability to think critically about what they are exposed to? I have young people who are passing Regents, graduating high school, and going on to college at higher rates than city averages. More importantly they are less likely to resort to negative risk behaviors and are more likely to be good decision-makers. Do some of them use the n word when they're not in the program? Possibly. (Code switchin is real)Are some of them the very youth who have created emotionally gripping artistic expressions of their experiences? Maybe. Contradiction is fodder for "adolescentdom" but the groundwork is being laid for media-literate self-empowered young adults who won't need to fall back to using abusive idioms! A Puerto Rican Black Chica!

  • Alimo 10/24/2008 10:52:00 PM

    Real talk! Very cool light on this. Riding through Wash Hgts/Inwood for a decade+, I see the cartoonish levels it's gone to...kids dropping it the same way 80's Valley Girls were excessive with the word "like." We should care. I'd also like to see the Black American male's view on this, since that word is connected all together differently to Black America, regardless of skin complexion. These aren�t the same dark and fair skin Latinos that stood together with Blacks during the past struggles that word came out of�they�re not even their offspring. It won't stop until we fix the problem. OBAMA!

  • cutie pie 10/24/2008 9:34:00 PM

    the only you will get away with using it around me is if i can call you a redneck or a spic to your face then we are cool!

  • cutie pie 10/24/2008 9:30:00 PM

    i dont go for that n word usage, too many ancesters suffered from the use of the dirty word and i dont appreciate it , hip hop or not you better hop your ish out of my face and dont ever think you can use it in my presence, it aint going on, nobody ithat cool with me too use it and blacks need to stop and everybody else too, but just because blacks use it dont mean othere races can use it. how simple minded can they be!

  • vagabond 10/24/2008 8:58:00 PM

    This issue​ of using​ the word "​nigga​"​ is a class​ issue​ used by so calle​d educa​ted middl​e class​,​ upper​ middl​e class​ and upper​ class​ peopl​e of color​ to look down and admon​ish the so calle​d poor unwas​hed,​ ignor​ant worki​ng class​ peopl​e of color​.​ The crux of think​ing on this eliti​st argum​ent is based​ on the assum​ption​ that poor worki​ng class​ peopl​e don'​t have a polit​ical consc​iousn​ess and that they are using​ the word "​nigga​"​ in a conte​xt of shock​ and rebel​lion and witho​ut regar​d to the painf​ul histo​ry of the word.​ This is ridic​ulous​.​ The reaso​n the word "​nigga​"​ is preva​lent among​ both black​ and latin​o youth​ is in in compl​ete regar​d to the loade​d histo​ry that the word holds​.​ When one broth​er says to anoth​er broth​er on the stree​t "​What'​s up my nigga​?​"​ He's using​ the word "​nigga​"​ as a term of endea​rment​ in terms​ of recog​nizin​g a commo​n polit​ical condi​tion that they both are livin​g under​.​ There​ seems​ to be a lot of talk about​ this issue​ of the aboli​tion of the word "​nigga​"​ but no talk or very littl​e talk about​ the polit​ical condi​tion of "​nigga​"​.​ If some of the energ​y being​ waste​d on the aboli​tion of the use of the "​nigga​"​ were focus​ed on the aboli​tion of the polit​ical condi​tion that creat​ed the word "​nigga​"​ (and all the other​ words​ like it) then maybe​ the word "​nigga​"​ (and all the other​ words​ like it) would​ lose it's meani​ng (​withi​n our time)​ and in losin​g it's meani​ng (​again​,​ withi​n our time)​ would​ then lose it power​.​.​.​ These​ "​nigga​"​ debat​es are a divid​e and conqu​er tacti​c encou​raged​ by those​ who benef​it from our divis​ion and event​ually​ destr​uctio​n.​.​.​ A drama​tic chang​e in our polit​ical condi​tion would​ mean a drama​tic chang​e in our seman​tics.​.​. art is the weapo​n,​ vagab​ond write​r and direc​tor of MACHE​TERO www.​mache​tero-​movie​.​com www.​myspa​ce.​com/​mache​terom​ovie

  • AnnoyedCarib 10/24/2008 8:40:00 PM

    STUPID. THE WORD SHOULD NOT BE USED PERIOD. IF YOU WANT IT TO BE A WORD ONLY TO BE USED BY YOURSELVES AMONG YOURSELVES THAN MAKE SURE ONLY YOUR EARS HEAR YOUR ALBUMS AND ONLY YOUR PEOPLE BUY THEM.

  • Lisa 10/24/2008 7:04:00 PM

    I am not Latino but I come from a area where there is alot of them, and they use the word far more than Black kids. If it is used only as a "term of endearment " it wouldn't be a problem with me, but as soon as a latino/ Rican gets upset at a Black person it turns to an insult "NIGGER" and you can't have it both ways. A girlfriend of mine whose Puerto Rican is married to a black guy uses it as a insult when she is mad @ him. " I told that Nigger, I said Nigger you can have your shit I don't want it ! " She caught one for that sh*t ! Hi Anna!

  • Allan 10/24/2008 7:18:00 AM

    Isn't interesting that terms such as "spic", "wetback" or "platano" have not been reclaimed and redefined in the Latino hip-hop culture. I'm an old hip-hopper and remember when words like "party-people", "b-boy", "b-girl", "homey", "banji", were used to show connections to the sub-culture.

  • A 10/24/2008 4:56:00 AM

    Enjoyed the article.I definitely do think its appropriation has been defined by class/social standings, and its prevalent usage can be found among minority enclaves throughout the city.If you go around Brooklyn/Queens you'll notice alot of Pakistani/Bengali/Punjabi kids using the word as frequently as "Yo".I'm guilty of that myself and for many new immigrants who come to America at an early age its almost become part of the assimilation process, I've heard 3rd graders use the word like its nothing.When I was in school and used it towards my black and Hispanic brethren I was never "checked" for being a brown dude using the word...so of course many kids growing up don't realize the historical significance of the word...until they leave the confines of the city or become introspective adults.

  • D 10/24/2008 2:36:00 AM

    it's good to hear a perspective on this issue. i wanted to point out that you said nas' album was almost titled "Nigga," but it was not. it was almost titled "Nigger," which obviously has different implications. It's important to point this out. but immortal technique is right that class has a lot to do with its use nowadays. it also has to do with, from a minority perspective, whether you're a part of the "us" group (people who struggle to make a living) or the "them" group (well off people who look down on those not like them or less well off, and those who make money exploiting the less well off). these reasons are also why some white people (such as myself) get called someone's nigga as a term of endearment from a black or hispanic person. also, people keep saying barack is black but he's half. he's as white as he is black. i feel like people either forget that fact or don't want to point out his white side just because of the significance that he is part african-american and he might win the presidency.

  • divine0313 10/24/2008 1:07:00 AM

    i love this piece, simply because it does help bring down the illusory barriers that exist between african american and latino people. right now, due to a few discussions i've been in, the realization that 95% of african sold slaves were sold into what is called the latino community is changing and expanding the view of blackness. for example the focal definition of blackness was based on the african american community for a long time, even with the way the history of hip hop was documented. but now that is shifting. and i can partially why such an earlier would take place, because no matter what happened in result to integration and the civil rights movement, nationalism never worked here to the point where race was taking the backseat to nationality as compared to many others outside of the u.s. i know plenty latinos who recognize their selves as black, but identify with their "patria" first and then their race. plus the african culture was strongly preserved in the latino community, which is different from the form the assimilation that took place in the states. a new black culture was developed in the states, as compared to the cultures in the latin americas, where it is more like an evolution from the slave trade with various blends of euro-centric symbolism as well. but i personally do think that nigga is being taken a little too far, because for the occurring progress of racial understanding for the latinos has partially to do with the use of the word. hence look at pun's "that nigga shit". which describes all the stereotypical ghetto realities that many live among the african-american and latino youth. and in latin american countries, it is said equivocally in spanish, "negro". though i may be a light skinned dominican, due to my full lips and appearance i'm called negro, moreno and all that. but i think with considerable history and discussion a new racial understanding can create a brand new sense of a broader solidarity. but we'll see.

  • Djinji Brown 10/24/2008 12:46:00 AM

    Raquel Cepeda provokes thought! This particular piece asks the reader to question themselves on a very profound level, especially the readers who have been influenced by or have contributed to hip-hop culture. Similiar to her movie "Bling" Raquel doesn't tell you what you should be thinking or doing about an issue, she asks you to ask yourself, "Am I part of the problem or part of the solution?" We as a society have to be more responsible to each other's past, present , and future. It takes a village to raise a child and this piece challenges the reader to step out of his or her comfort zone, and be part of the bigger picture. We are all responsible to the children for they are the future. Self esteem is very important in the raising of all people regardless of race, creed, or color. A lack of self esteem has been one of the many perils to plague black and latino communities for many years. This piece makes me ask many questions of myself like " How can I be a part of the solution?". Thank you Raquel!!

  • Raquel Z. Rivera 10/24/2008 12:10:00 AM

    Very insightful. Hopefully, articles like this one will keep chipping away at the misconception that being Latino automatically means being non-black. I'm also extremely pleased by the always necessary reminder that the so-called Latin American racial democracy is just a myth. (That was a powerful quote by Immortal Technique. Well put!)

  • NativeNY'er 10/23/2008 8:53:00 PM

    Great and very necessary article. As a city native and person of color exposed to all peoples, the clear distinctions between people of color in this city is culture. African-Americans have no culture from back "home," to pull from so they've had to make theirs along the way. Latinos, whether fair or dark skin, have always had their heritage to fall back on when white oppression got the best of them. Blacks have usually included Latinos as a part of their community/subculture, but from my experience, I can't recall when Latinos ever returned the favor outside of a cookout on Orchard Beach. And they have nothing on disenfranchised blacks when it comes to self hate. Maybe as more of their women become educated and from under the foot of their insecure, oppressive men, this may change for future generations.

  • Afro-Boricua 10/23/2008 7:30:00 AM

    Great article hermana. Many Afro-Latino's are coming into there own, and acknowledging with pride their African ancestry. As a fair skinned Afro-Boricua, I've come to accept all that I am, the blackness is in our Latino music, food, dance, and lingo. With articles like this, and websites like www.blacktino.net, we are a growing force, ready willing an able to stand for our blacktinoness.

  • thescoop 10/22/2008 5:26:00 AM

    Black America and the N-word: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dP2U0jmZjec

 

Most Popular Stories

Find a Concert


Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy