Jacpher Posted June 1, 2007 Identity: Who do you think you are? My overriding identity is Somali although I live in the United States. If you asked me what makes me who I am? I think it would take me a while to respond. Our identities are shaped by the world in which we live. Outsiders influence how we think and even look at ourselves. I think being Somali is contradictory because the Somali identity is mixed, and even, dare I say, confused. We are Africans... and yet we are also part of the Arab world. I belong to a powerful clan in Somalia, but I have no affinity for it. Our psyche, worldview and even who we are is mingled with what happens in the Arab world. Our Somali identity is real: our music, food and everything we do smells of a unique Africa. Beautiful and proud, Somalis remain Somali. Clan means so much to so many of my people. Yes, I belong to a clan, a powerful clan in Somalia, but I have no affinity for it. I choose to be Somali. But I am also more than Somali, I am the product of many oceans, always changing, revolving, learning and growing. Yet my Somali culture and history remains the tower that gives light to the oceans I swim in. I breathe like a Somali. My culture is not a fixed configuration but a constructive process. This is maybe a weakness on my part, but my identity and culture are always conditional to my environment and the centre of the process that I feel is never complete but always under construction. This is the Somali story: we are the product of many cultures, ideas and people. I am Somali. Source Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites