I’ve lived in a few countries, travelled through some more, went to school, made friends, associated or worked with people from all over the world and have learned languages that were never spoken by any of my ancestors, but not before I crossed into the People’s Universe of China, had the concept of someone or something being foreign solidified in my mind.

The notion of foreigness is something that was completely absent from my upbringing or my education. I’m from Montreal, Canada, and I grew up in neighborhoods where Hasidic Jews and third generation Greek Canadians, Haitians with Port-au-Prince accents and Vietnamese kids with jagged haircuts crossed paths daily. My classmates were Lebanese, Romanian, Ivorian, French, Congolese, Yugoslavian (before the breakup), Polish, Chinese. Where I come from we do not distinguish between foreign and native, simply because the distinction can’t be made unless you ask everyone you meet for their passport. Big city Canada is too diverse for the concept of foreign to have any relevance on the street.

My family and I have lived in Europe as well, where history and homogeneity come thicker and more readily remembered. It doesn’t get much whiter than certain parts of Austria or Switzerland, but as a Caucasian in those countries, we didn’t stick out, we weren’t the ones that the locals labeled as foreign. In terms of my own evolving conception of the world and its inhabitants at that time, I was living in a Benetton’s ad, blissfully colorless and raceless in a world awash in color and race. My group of friends was so international that some didn’t even have a nationality: one classmate of mine was the son of a Tibetan refugee and another came from Zaire.

China is an entirely different story. For anyone whose visited or lived in this country, save for perhaps other far-easterners not of PRC stock, foreigness is an almost physical force, akin to gravity or menopause, a phenomenon of nature. Foreigness makes you a stare magnet, a 3d mystery so utterly recognisable as human that the humanity itself is perhaps thrown into doubt. Foreigness makes the pretty women giggle and the construction workers wince in silent appraisal. Foreigness makes you instant friends that you never meet again, it clears a path before you like the red sea parting, it keeps unknown dangers at bay. It’s also a little like wearing a social body condom at times. It sometimes feels like you’re really wearing your own skin.

I imagine everyone has different reactions to becoming foreign and different attitudes in dealing with the consequences thereof. A certain bitterness is what I have detected most commonly, a vibe like the egos of fallen royals, wounded by the fact that their former subjects do not judge them worthy of the guillotine, they must walk immune to retribution and yet powerless amongst those whom they once disdained.

I still struggle with being a foreigner. In situations where my foreigness is incandescent, on a crowded train for example, I wonder if this is racism, if this is prejudice, as it is felt in the gut of its target. It is not, for I have never felt any hatred attached to any stares, only a twitch in my character that sometimes makes me turn away from them, wanting to be unseen and in turn not to see my foreigness captured in so many eyes.

Discussion

9
  1. Maybe there’s no hatred in the stares directed at you (and me, too) as a white person, but I wouldn’t say the same for the stares that those of African descent get.

    You did really capture the feeling that I have quite often as I get stared at–the feeling that you’re wearing your skin.

  2. I really like your article and feel it gets at a point all “Whities” can understand, however I have to agree with the commenter that this does not pertain to anyone that is not of the paler completion.

    I have had middle-eastern and African friends that have been accused of being drug-dealers, thieves, and a host of other not-so-cool crimes.

    I think this “Being a star” feeling wears off after a few years and the mystery of it all fades away. When it does you start to ask the racism question more and more, especially as you here what they are saying as they stare. Quaintness only goes so far

  3. What happened to the article about flickr’s blockage in China? For someone like me who is trying to share photo’s with my family as well as being a paying customer, I still think it’s an important issue.

  4. I’m from Quebec City and it’s my first time in China and abroad in my life. I’ve been in Dalian for two months so far studying Mandarin.

    It’s true that being a white foreigner brings lots of attention around here. Chinese people always say how “handsome” I look and how “good” my spoken Chinese is even though it’s really bad ! But they are like that, they just enjoy giving compliments.

    I don’t mind the looks and never felt it was due to racism. It’s mostly curiosity and people will approach me often to ask where I am from.

    But the black people get bad looks and it is clearly due to racism. I have some friends from Africa who complains how unfriendly the Chinese are sometimes with them and I’ve noticed it too.

    So yeah, it’s nice for some and not for others.

  5. “China is an entirely different story….” Great paragraph, and I heartily agree. It’s like being on my period all. the. time. Or it was. My decision to move to Beijing was born largely out of a desire to just… kinda… fit in a little more, and still get to live here. I shall never look at immigrants in my own country the same way again.

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