Nmlt New report shows that US is warming faster than the rest of the world MILWAUKEE — In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, were dedicated to exploring the issues that affect the population at large, like colorism.Pew Research defines colorism as a type of discrimination based on skin color, where having lighter skin is considered best.Rozalia Hernandez-Singh is an artist who identifies as Afro-Latina and for her, colorism is something that she may not have always had a name for, but it was never too far from her mind. That was a new word for me, and probably within the last 10 years or so. But I knew all about it, said Hernandez-Singh.RELATED: Milwaukee Public Schools offers students Bilingual Multicultural Education <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.uk>stanley quencher</a> programGrowing up in Milwaukee as a person with Puerto Rican, Black and Mexican heritage, Hernandez-Singh says she and her siblings dealt with being misunderstood all the time, because of the darkness of their skin and their features, compared to other members of their family. We looked a bit different. And we felt like, kind of, we felt excluded, we felt <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.uk>stanley cup quencher</a> uncomfortable being there, said Hernandez-Singh.On the other side of the spectrum, Katie Avila Loughmiller grew up adopted into a white family in Boston.Born in Bogota, Colombia, Avila Loughmiller says she didnt always have the community or words to articulate how different she felt. |