Anyone who knows me knows there’s one thing I’ll always bring up in conversation: “what are the black people up to?” So one thing that’s often on my mind, given my upcoming research project, is what are the struggles and the triumphs of Afro-Costa Rican people.
I have realized that, of course, race relations here are not the same as they are in the US. When the topics of African influence or Afro-Costa Rican people come up in conversation, people don’t always know what to say. If I refer to racist or hateful actions in the US, the general response is “that’s just not a thing here.” While I have my doubts about Costa Rica being a perfectly democratic and egalitarian society, I have noticed a feeling of being more valued and dignified here in a way that I can’t quite explain.
This is a critical incident because of the difference in how I commonly talk about how to improve racial attitudes in the US compared to how I will have to continue to approach racial attitudes here. I’d like to keep my ear to the ground on racial attitudes and relations, and to do so I will have to remain aware of the cultural differences in engaging the concept of race.