Raising Katie

What adopting a white girl taught a black family about race in the Obama
era.
by Tony Dokoupil

see the link for photos.
http://www.in.com/news/readnews-Lifestyle-what-happened-when-a-black-family-adopted-a-white-girl-9000993-cc17d2a5845b52ef1cffe5e68aea1bc6dc103c1b-hp.html


Several pairs of eyes follow the girl as she pedals around the playground in
an affluent suburb of Baltimore. But it isn't the redheaded fourth grader
who seems to have moms and dads of the jungle gym nervous on this recent
Saturday morning. It's the African-American man—six feet tall, bearded and
wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt—watching the girl's every move. Approaching
from behind, he grabs the back of her bicycle seat as she wobbles to a stop.
"Nice riding," he says, as the fair-skinned girl turns to him, beaming.
"Thanks, Daddy," she replies. The onlookers are clearly flummoxed.

As a black father and adopted white daughter, Mark Riding and Katie
O'Dea-Smith are a sight at best surprising, and at worst so perplexing that
people feel compelled to respond. Like the time at a Pocono Mountains flea
market when Riding scolded Katie, attracting so many sharp glares that he
and his wife, Terri, 37, and also African-American, thought "we might be
lynched." And the time when well-intentioned shoppers followed Mark and
Katie out of the mall to make sure she wasn't being kidnapped. Or when
would-be heroes come up to Katie in the cereal aisle and ask, "Are you
OK?"—even though Terri is standing right there.

Is it racism? The Ridings tend to think so, and it's hard to blame them. To
shadow them for a day, as I recently did, is to feel the unease, notice the
negative attention and realize that the same note of fear isn't in the air
when they attend to their two biological children, who are 2 and 5 years
old. It's fashionable to say that the election of Barack Obama has brought
the dawn of a post-racial America. In the past few months alone, The
Atlantic Monthly has declared "the end of white America," The Washington
Post has profiled the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People's struggle for relevance in a changing world, and National Public
Radio has led discussions questioning the necessity of the annual Black
History Month. Perhaps not surprising, most white and black Americans no
longer cite racism as a major social problem, according to recent polls.

But the Ridings' experience runs counter to these popular notions of
harmony. And adoption between races is particularly fraught. So-called
transracial adoptions have surged since 1994, when the Multiethnic Placement
Act reversed decades of outright racial matching by banning discrimination
against adoptive families on the basis of race. But the growth has been all
one-sided. The number of white families adopting outside their race is
growing and is now in the thousands, while cases like Katie's—of a black
family adopting a nonblack child—remain frozen at near zero.

Decades after the racial integration of offices, buses and water fountains,
persistent double standards mean that African-American parents are still
largely viewed with unease as caretakers of any children other than their
own—or those they are paid to look after. As Yale historian Matthew Frye
Jacobson has asked: "Why is it that in the United States, a white woman can
have black children but a black woman cannot have white children?"

That question hit home for the Ridings in 2003, when Terri's mother, Phyllis
Smith, agreed to take in Katie, then 3, on a temporary basis. A retired
social worker, Phyllis had long been giving needy children a home—and Katie
was one of the hardest cases. The child of a local prostitute, her toddler
tantrums were so disturbing that foster families simply refused to keep her.
Twelve homes later, Katie was still being passed around. Phyllis was in many
ways an unlikely savior. The former president of the Baltimore chapter of
the National Association of Black Social Workers, she joined her colleagues
in condemning the adoption of black children by white families as "cultural
genocide"—a position she still holds in theory, if not in practice. She
couldn't say no to the "charming, energetic" girl who ended up on her front
doorstep.

Last November, after a grueling adoption process—"[adoption officials]
pushed the envelope on every issue," says Mark—little Irish-Catholic Katie
O'Dea, as pale as a communion wafer, became Katie O'Dea-Smith: a formally
adopted member of the African-American Riding-Smith family. (Phyllis is her
legal guardian, but Mark and Terri were also vetted as legal surrogates for
Phyllis.)

To be sure, it's an unconventional arrangement. Katie spends weekdays with
Phyllis, her legal guardian. But Mark and Terri, who live around the corner,
are her de facto parents, too. They help out during the week, and welcome
Katie over on weekends and holidays. As for titles: Katie calls Phyllis
"Mommy" and Terri "Sister," since technically it's true. Mark has always
been "Daddy" or "Mark."

"Let me just put it out there," says Mark, a 38-year-old private-school
admissions director with an appealing blend of megaphone voice and fearless
opinion, especially when it comes to his family. "I've never felt more
self-consciously black than while holding our little white girl's hand in
public." He used to write off the negative attention as innocent curiosity.
But after a half-decade of rude comments and revealing faux pas—like the
time his school's guidance counselor called Katie a "foster child" in her
presence—he now fights the ignorance with a question of his own: why didn't
a white family step up to take Katie?

Riding's challenge hints at a persistent social problem. "No country in the
world has made more progress toward combating overt racism than [the United
States]," says David Schneider, a Rice University psychologist and the
author of "The Psychology of Stereotyping." "But the most popular stereotype
of black people is still that they're violent. And for a lot of people, not
even racist people, the sight of a white child with a black parent just sets
off alarm signals."

Part of the reason for the adoptive imbalance comes down to numbers, and the
fact that people tend to want children of their own race. African-Americans
represent almost one third of the 510,000 children in foster care, so black
parents have a relatively high chance of ending up with a same-race child.
(Not so for would-be adoptive white parents who prefer the rarest thing of
all in the foster-care system: a healthy white baby.) But the dearth of
black families with nonblack children also has painful historical roots.
Economic hardship and centuries of poisonous belief in the so-called
civilizing effects of white culture upon other races have familiarized
Americans with the concept of white stewardship of other ethnicities, rather
than the reverse.

The result is not only discomfort among whites at the thought of nonwhites
raising their offspring; African-Americans can also be wary when one of
their own is a parent to a child outside their race. Just ask Dallas Cowboys
All-Pro linebacker DeMarcus Ware and his wife, Taniqua, who faced a barrage
of criticism after adopting a nonblack baby last February. When The New York
Times sports page ran a photo of the shirtless new father with what appeared
to be a white baby in his arms (and didn't mention race in the accompanying
story), it sent a slow shock wave through the African-American community,
pitting supporters who celebrated the couple's joy after three painful
miscarriages against critics who branded the Wares "self-race-hating
individuals" for ignoring the disproportionate number of blacks in foster
care. The baby, now their daughter, Marley, is in fact Hispanic. "Do you
mean to tell me that the Wares couldn't have found a little black baby to
adopt?" snarled one blogger on the Daily Voice, an online African-American
newspaper.

For the relatively few black families that do adopt non-African-American
children, and the adoptive children themselves, the experience can be
confusing. "I hadn't realized how often we talked about white people at
home," says Mark. "I hadn't realized that dinnertime stories were often told
with reference to the race of the players, or that I often used racial
stereotypes, as in the news only cares about some missing spring-break girl
because she is blonde.'"

Katie, too, has sometimes struggled with her unusual situation, and how
outsiders perceive it. When she's not drawing, swimming or pining after teen
heartthrob Zac Efron, she's often dealing with normal kid teasing with a
nasty edge. "They'll ignore me or yell at me because I have a black family,"
she says. Most of her friends are black, although her school is primarily
white. And Terri has noticed something else: Katie is uncomfortable
identifying people by their race.

Is she racially confused? Should her parents be worried? Opinions vary in
the larger debate about whether race is a legitimate consideration in
adoption. At present, agencies that receive public funding are forbidden
from taking race into account when screening potential parents. They are
also banned from asking parents to reflect on their readiness to deal with
race-related issues, or from requiring them to undergo sensitivity training.
But a well-meaning policy intended to ensure colorblindness appears to be
backfiring. According to a study published last year by the Evan B.
Donaldson Adoption Institute, transracial parents are often ill equipped to
raise children who are themselves unprepared for the world's racial
realities.

Now lawmakers may rejoin the charged race-adoption debate. Later this year
the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, an independent federal think tank, is
expected to publish a summary of expert testimony on adoption law—much of
which will ask Congress to reinstate race as a salient consideration in all
cases. The testimony, from the Evan B. Donaldson institute and others, will
also suggest initiatives currently banned or poorly executed under existing
policies, including racial training for parents and intensifying efforts to
recruit more black adoptive families.

Would such measures be a step back for Obama's post-racial America? It's
hard to tell. The Ridings, for their part, are taking Katie's racial
training into their own hands. They send her to a mixed-race school, and
mixed-race summer camps, celebrate St. Patrick's Day with gusto and buy
Irish knickknacks, like a "Kiss Me I'm Irish" T shirt and a mug with Katie's
O'Dea family crest emblazoned on it. But they worry it won't be enough. "All
else being equal, I think she should be with people who look like her," says
Mark. "It's not fair that she's got to grow up feeling different when she's
going to feel different anyway. She wears glasses, her voice is a bit
squeaky, and on top of that she has to deal with the fact that her mother is
70 and black."

But even if Katie feels different now, the Riding-Smiths have given her both
a stable home and a familiarity with two ethnic worlds that will surely
serve her well as she grows up in a country that is increasingly blended.
And it may be that hers will be the first truly post-racial generation.
 URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/194886

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