My Lifelong Journey Embracing Mixed-Race Identity

Singer Raiche shares her experience defining herself and what truly matters most

Raiche Wright
LEVEL

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Photo courtesy of Atlantic Records

Update 6/7/22: Level has a new home. You can read this article and other new articles by visiting LEVELMAN.com.

As I’ve matured, traveled the world, and learned about racism, I’ve had the opportunity to find comfort in my identity as a mixed-race person. But it hasn’t always been easy figuring out my place in a world defined by so much hate.

My mother is French-Canadian; my dad is of Cameroonian and Native American descent. Growing up in a majority White community in Massachusetts had its challenges and led to a whole lot of confusion.

I went to a private Christian school until eighth grade, then a small high school where my sister and I were the only children of color. My classmates often looked at me to be the voice for all Black people, which was overwhelming; so much of their opinions of Black people were grounded in tropes of poverty and crime. Some who didn’t even know me would expect me to fit into a stereotypical mold of Blackness. I didn’t fit into my peers’ expectations of whiteness, either. So I questioned everything I was and everything I knew.

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