Sep 6, 2024
WATCH: White Woman's Racist Command To Adopted Black Girl Sparks Massive Outrage
WATCH: White Woman's Racist Command To Adopted Black Girl Sparks Massive Outrage
- 6 minutes
This story will probably shock you.
A white woman orders an adopted black girl
to carry rice on her head.
You know, like like Africans.
- Here it is, right on.
- Your head.
Like an African.
Lift it up there. Come on.
Yes. Put it on there.
Come on, come on.
[00:00:16]
You have to know how to do this.
This is like in your blood.
Oh, there we go. You got this.
Okay, now get it centered on there,
Keep your head still.
Oh, that's pretty heavy.
Oh, gosh, I can't get it on there.
Centered.
[00:00:32]
- There we go.
- Let's put up the picture for a mass
that is the mother of that child.
The child is adopted by the culturally
[00:00:49]
insensitive woman that you see.
Kay-lee Wilson.
And I hope somebody gets you this segment.
Kayla Wilson is a mother who decided
[00:01:08]
to adopt a child from Africa.
She instructed this child to put a bag
of rice on her head because it's, quote in
her blood drew backlash over the mother's
cultural education methods.
[00:01:25]
Wilson, who runs an adoption coaching
business, operates social channels
with content about her lifestyle, caring
for her adopted and biological children.
Now, ma'am, I gotta tell you, I really
do want to give you some benefit here.
[00:01:40]
But you're making it real hard. Alright.
I, as I said, I'm. I was a foster kid.
I had people who were selfless and,
were not responsible
to take care of me, but they did.
Nobody's perfect.
Alright. There's more to the story.
So in the caption of the video I,
Wilson wrote, quote.
[00:02:02]
Let's have a black baby emoji.
And who wore it better?
When faced with criticism over the clip,
Wilson posted a response video showing all
the angry comments, essentially saying
she was celebrating their African culture.
[00:02:19]
Quote, we spent over two years
living in various African countries,
learning the culture and spending time
with the people, Wilson stated.
They don't get offended and they love
when we partake in their culture.
We look forward
to moving back to Lagos soon.
[00:02:37]
Yeah, she she likes black people.
She's comfortable with the Africans.
Let's put it up.
Right.
In many African countries
and other areas of the world,
[00:02:54]
head carrying is a practice that helps
people carry and transport goods.
The practice is deeply ingrained
in the economic and social infrastructure
as an important domestic
and occupational responsibility.
While some deemed the moment cute
and instructive, others expressed concerns
[00:03:11]
with Wilson's verbiage while
educating the child about a heritage.
Most communists believe
Wilson lacked cultural competency
due to her choice of words,
urged her to adopt better teaching styles.
And I want to say this, madam, the way you
[00:03:26]
contextualized it made it a cultural joke
when it in fact is a cultural dynamic
that aids in the heritage,
[00:03:42]
the legacy, the ability to transport,
and the skill that's learned and taught
from generation to generation.
If you teach it in that context,
nobody gets upset.
But this is the moment when you realize
you have a black African child.
[00:04:00]
That's it.
You get to live in a world
where you don't have to do things like,
let's say, code switch.
Okay. But your child will, unfortunately.
So the contextualization was the issue.
[00:04:18]
And a child who's not conscious
of your minimal, your minimizing
of the cultural dynamic, that doesn't mean
that you're off the hook.
You have to lead the child in a way
that's comparable to the love you have.
[00:04:35]
And I have a rule in my family,
and the rule is if I've hurt you, I care
about your emotional well-being first.
Even if it was unintentional
or a misunderstanding.
I need to know.
[00:04:51]
Are you okay? First Period.
Alright, so one commenter wrote, I want
to read this for the record set the fact
that you don't know why your words are
insensitive tells me all I need to know.
[00:05:08]
The historical context is so far beyond
beyond people being offended or sensitive.
One person commented this is so
disrespectful even if she is an African.
Since when is something
from a culture in her blood?
Carrying a bag of rice is not her blood?
[00:05:24]
Someone else wrote I am African
and I live in Africa with my parents.
Have never made me carry
a heavy bag on my head.
Another comment reads how carrying
heavy bags on our head is in our blood,
according to you, is diabolical.
And and ma'am, can you can you
at least listen to the Africans
[00:05:42]
that are responding on your page?
Can you do that?
Can you pause for a moment?
All right, Jackson,
what are your thoughts here?
Well, I think, our beliefs cause us to go
about things in certain types of ways.
[00:05:58]
For instance, like if she wasn't
being exploited, exploitative, and,
and just kind of trying
to make a spectacle out of things,
then she could have not recorded it.
Or even if she did record it, let's just
be like, hey, let's both put bags on our
heads and see if we can make it to the end
of the aisle without dropping it.
[00:06:16]
Like totally different context right
there, you know what I'm saying?
Like then it would have just been like,
anybody could have done that, like.
But that's not what she did.
You know, she she put it on.
She made a spectacle out of it.
She was like, oh, you know,
you kind of got it in your DNA.
Let's go.
And she was trying to get views off of it.
[00:06:33]
And then she pretended
like she didn't know what was going on.
Like she just couldn't understand.
But again, a simple change of context
and how she went about it
would have completely changed
how people saw this incident.
But again, what we believe is, you know,
causes us to go about everything,
[00:06:51]
certain types of ways.
So that's all right.
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