By Serena Zets – 10th Grade, Pittsburgh CAPA
My mother was teased for her bindi.
Her lunches of curry and rice
were scoffed at.
She was shamed for accepting
outdated hand-me-downs
from the neighbor girl.
But, I’m considered cool
because of my paisley
tunics and samosas.
Culture is the new couture.
I’ve witnessed the never-ending stream of
white girls with bindis peppering
their foreheads,
as if they’re nothing more than
insignificant freckles.
Their hands are adorned with the beautiful
scrolls and curls of henna. Too bad
the even more beautiful meaning
has been scrubbed away.
One time, for Halloween,
I let a friend borrow a sari, so they
could become a gypsy for a night
of trick or treating.
Looking back, I want to shout it in the
girl’s face that,
“MY CULTURE IS NOT A COSTUME”.
I’m not here to be objectified and romanticized.
Because being questioned in airports is not fun.
Having slurs hurled at me in parking lots
is not trendy.
It’s my reality.
Serena Zets is a sophomore at Pittsburgh Creative and Performing Arts High School. At CAPA, her discipline is literary arts where she received the opportunity to take part in an introductory journalism course. She is a resident of Squirrel Hill where she bakes, reads, and most importantly sleeps.
1 Comment
Maura
Ohmygod this is amazing!
3 Nov
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