My neighborhood was primarily white and Hispanic. My elementary school ( Walt Disney Magnet School ) was extremely diverse. The same goes for my high school.
My neighborhood was primarily white and Hispanic. My elementary school ( Walt Disney Magnet School ) was extremely diverse. The same goes for my high school.
Blacks are the biggest minority in my city, followed by whites. My parents also are pretty generous people so we've had a lot of non-related people live with us (1 white, 2 black, 4 Latino, 1 Asian). I would say I had a diverse upbringing.
Blacks are the biggest minority in my city, followed by whites. My parents also are pretty generous people so we've had a lot of non-related people live with us (1 white, 2 black, 4 Latino, 1 Asian). I would say I had a diverse upbringing.
Yes, my community is extremely diverse. One of my friends cracks me up, it's tears when I'm you see a black guy singing Selena Quintanilla word by word. Another mother friends mom asked me what we had been feeding him cuz he went back home asking his mom if she knew how to make enchiladas
Most of my youth not really, but I didn't see them as an anomaly as a child either. Hell I thought racism didn't exist and that it was left in the dust after 90s.
Not not really. My mom's friend's husband was black and sometimes we went over there and hung out wit his nieces. My hometown is probably 98% caucasian [Northern MI]. There were a couple black kids at my school but that's about it.
I moved to a bigger city... made a few black friends [who I have since cut ties with for personal reasons..]
There are no blacks in my country but I grew up listening to many r&b and some rap artists. There are Papuan people who are actually Melanesian that "look black" if that counts but they're rarely found in big cities since they're more concentrated in their own lands in the east.