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    • Broadsheet: Where are you from? exhibition at Blak Dot Gallery
    • ABC Life: 'Where are you really from?' How to navigate this question of race and identity
    • Acclaim: “Where Are You From?” The exhibition celebrating Australia’s diversity.
    • Nique Journal: An Interview with Sabina McKenna
    • East Side Radio: Where are you from?
    • Fashion Journal Feature
Where are you from?
  • About
  • SHOP
  • Submit
  • Hair
  • PEOPLE
  • 2021 Series
  • Launch
  • Video: WAYF? by Indoor Fountains
  • Press
    • Broadsheet: Where are you from? exhibition at Blak Dot Gallery
    • ABC Life: 'Where are you really from?' How to navigate this question of race and identity
    • Acclaim: “Where Are You From?” The exhibition celebrating Australia’s diversity.
    • Nique Journal: An Interview with Sabina McKenna
    • East Side Radio: Where are you from?
    • Fashion Journal Feature

Tina Vlahos

 

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When was the last time someone asked you where you are from?

The other week.

What happened/how did they say it?

Him:So where’d you come from?

Me: Prahran.

Him: Oh nah I mean where are you REALLY from?

Me: Melbourne?

Him: Nah like you weren’t born here, what country mate?

Me: ‘I was born and raised here.

Him: Oh yeah but your nationality.

Me: Lol, Polynesian and European.

Him (getting a little frustrated with my answers): Oh yeah you looked like one of them Islanders, are you Maori or Samoan?

Me: I’m Indo-Fijian.

Him: Oh so you’re not even Fijian?

He didn’t drop it and we ended up talking for a couple more minutes, he was quite persistent trying to get to the bottom of what my heritage is; it was quite invalidating and unsettling.

What was the person like?

Uncomfortably curious, caucasian.

How did/does it make you feel?

I understand that people are genuinely curious and most don’t mean any harm by asking, but sometimes when they ask in an off-tone like that it makes me feel like I don’t belong anywhere. Being mixed is tricky because whichever motherland I visit I feel either to white or too brown, I’m fortunate to live in multicultural Melbourne, and for the most part I feel a sense of belonging, but when those questions are raised I can’t help but feel a little alien.

What connotations do you think the question has and what do you think it says about Australia in terms of the way we understand cultural identity/ nationality?

It can go both ways. I’ve had positive experiences with this question, some relating to me being from the same motherland, but on the more negative side - usually when Caucasians ask - when I’m subjected to this question, on many occasions, I’ve been met with almost their disapproval/disappointment. They tend to reword the same question: ‘where are your parents from’; ‘what is your nationality’, and so on. Because it seems like most cannot fathom the idea that I am from here. Melbourne is such a rich-multicultural collective of people and I understand that some are curious but when the question is targeted directly at me, It’s hard not to feel different.

 
 

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