Just when I thought I understood the shape and texture of racism in Australia, a new level of understanding opened up to me when my 19-year-old sister came to live with us.
Natasha is young enough to be my daughter, the younger of two adopted girls from my father’s second marriage. She is Sri Lankan and has dark enough skin that you might mistake her for someone from the Caribbean. She is tall, with long dark hair, glittering piercings, a few discreet tattoos, a megawatt smile and a heavy London accent. She is hard to miss.
Hanging out with her in public, I notice how much attention she gets, positive and negative.
In a country where there are few black people she sticks out and she feels it. “Where are all the black people?”, she asks me as we walk through the city. She comes from London where there are more people of colour generally. She tends to hang out in places where she is not so conspicuous.
Spending time with her I notice how for no apparent reason people are antagonist towards her. A passenger on a plane. An airhostess. A barista. A neighbour of ours eyed her with deep suspicion as she smoked her morning cigarette in front of our house. I had to take her around and introduce her to those living near us as my sister.
Then there have been some overt examples of racist behaviour. Like the stoned couple at the restaurant where she was serving as a waitress. The girl told her she was beautiful but then asked if she had a juicy black vagina. The man bit her playfully on the arm when she tried to take his plate away. Another women, angry her curry was a little on the watery side, called her “a stupid wog”. Did they feel they could treat her like that because she was a young woman? A waitress? Or black? Or a combination of all these?