When my daughter started kindergarten, we moved to a Sydney suburb on the brink of gentrification. The local primary was up a small lane behind our house and we walked her there, both of us anxious that she would like it and, most importantly, that she would make friends.
This was a suburb known for its diversity, and you could see it in the houses. The Greek and Vietnamese had concreted their front yards, and replaced timber windows with the more practical aluminium. The newly arrived – who worked at the ABC or the University of Technology – were in the throes of renovating and planting native gardens, Vote Green stickers on their cars. There was also a large strip of flats, built in the seventies, furniture dumped out the front, windows broken; these were the cheap rentals, frequently lived in by people with drug and alcohol issues.
People like us – the newly arrived – trumpeted their pride in this diversity, but the reality was we rarely stepped outside the comfort of our own white middle class ghettoes. Our interaction was limited to the clichéd. The old Greek man up the road gave me endless vegetables – foreplay for a determined grope as soon as we were alone. We smiled and nodded at the ancient Chinese man next door but never spoke, and we avoided the household at the bottom of the street, a speed lab where the police were called frequently.
Yet, while most of the people I got to know belonged to the same white middle class ghetto as myself, the working class woman two doors up was crashing down the barriers. She regularly spoke disparagingly of all the Asiatics in the area, but despite her decidedly un-correct language, she was the only one who really befriended the new Vietnamese neighbours.
Our children were also busy climbing over fences into gardens very different to our own.
A couple of weeks after that first day at school, I dropped my daughter off for a play at her new best friend’s house. The house was in complete darkness, draped in velvet and adorned with crucifixes. I have always liked to think of myself as accepting, inclusive and aware of the dangers of forming judgements on first impressions – but I was challenged. My daughter, on the other hand, was oblivious. To her, these were people like any other.
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In the book "Free Range Kids" the author advises that we teach our kids not to be afraid of strangers, as they may well be the ones that HELP our children if they ever find themselves being threatened or harrassed in a public situation. Instead of creating generalised fear, and telling them never ever talk to strangers she says, teach your children to never to GO WITH a stranger. I think this is a more realistic approach to life.
It's so easy to "profile" people (I think especially as a woman, you kind of have to do this, eg. suss out the people around you and make some assumptions), but I don't want my kids to be fearful of people just because they don't look or act like them. I suppose because both my parents were social workers, I was exposed to a lot of marginal and "diverse" people growing up. At first it can be kind of embarrassing and awkward, but once you get past that, it really does enrich your life to be friends with those who have different points of view, different backgrounds, looks, abilities, etc.
It's a long learning process... once you get beyond your own (completely understandable) prejudices, you get more savvy about sorting the wheat from the chaff, when you judge people's merit. It rarely has to do with the most obvious things.
I was friends with an Indian girl at school. Her mother didn't like me. One day I was playing with my friend and her brothers, and her older sister saw us. She told her Mum and she flew off the handle.
Told me she didn't want her son associating with "white, Aussie" girls. Being 15, I was speechless. I told her I had no interest in her son, he was a friend. After that she was lovely, saying she just didn't want her kids marrying or dating Caucasian, white people.
And they say Australians are racist..