Babel had an
interesting connectivity among the relationship of people presented. The most
shocking personally among the three very different identities was the American
couple in Morocco. The Americaness was a light that shinned very brightly in
sense of White powerful control and different discourses which had been
accumulated through terrorism. Among this white “nuclear family”, superiority
was immediately given to the White female being an American citizen in a “foreign"
country if you will. This immediate demand of help, the way the “victim” viewed
the Moroccan grandmother trying to ease her pain, and the direct connection Brad
Pitt had with the U. S. Embassy. This was another racial prejudice even in need
of the “foreigner” for help. It is crazy that even now with me writing this I
possess a Western mindset. I continue to use the term “foreigner” when in
actuality this couple was visiting their country. Brad Pitt and his wife were
truly the foreigners. Also, immediately these two kids whom were playing with a
rifle above a mountain top and mistakenly shot this White woman were labeled as
terrorists. I guess any native from a foreign land other than the West is
considered terrorists. WOW.
Secondly, the
Mexican house maid was immediately viewed as the criminal inside the boundaries
of the U.S. She was arrested without any question, and placed as a harmful
figure among the two white kids. Not only had her employer demanded she stay
and watch his kids, but also had absolutely no remorse or care for her personal
life. She was an immigrant working in the United States pretty much under the
same enslavement categories as any other migrant just under a different lens. This
particular story was bothersome based on the mere fact of their ethnicity. The
police officers while driving though I personally believe gave them a hard time
simply because of their race. Where is the freedom in choice or in that case,
what was the reason for showing the passports? America is a country that only
looks out for its own, and it is socially equipped to place “others” no matter
background, education, morals, or wealth into a category systematically as
different and not possessing not even the smallest of the same rights as a true
U.S. citizen or whatever that means. The ideology associated with how the world
is viewed through the eyes of the West is ridiculous. American cannot simply be
the land of the free?? Instead, maybe the star spangled banner should remove that
stanza. I am not degrading my country, because I for one could not live outside
of a Western way of life, or do I just not want to, because I am so accustomed
to such privilege, if that’s even true for a Black woman in the U.S.
The Asian
family was a little peculiar to me. This nakedness of the young girl along with
her being deaf was a bit much. She seemed to have maternal issues, which dates
back to Global Migration of the mother not being present in their children’s
lives. Not to say her father wasn’t nurturing, but just that the nurturing was
not that of her mother. This nurturing may have well-equipped this young
teenage girl for sex and emotion. The displaying of her sexual parts was too
much to handle on an every 5min basis, but it only showed the way in which she
used her sexuality as a female to supposedly get what she wanted. This reminded
me of the stereotypical hyper sexuality given to women of color (Asian women).
Overall, the movie was great, and I do realize the amount of Western lifestyle
I hold as well. It’s scary almost. Finally, knowledge is power so use it very
carefully, but then again this is just my opinion, and hey on the other hand, who
and what gives me the right to speak for this Asian girl, Mexican house maid,
or White woman??
Was there anyone that you felt a special kinship with in this story?
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