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      <title>Marcadores by Xose Luisfabela Castillo</title>
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      <description>Hecho con la fuerza necesaria para triunfar</description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2022-02-01 21:33:04 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>38 years old, graduated in Communication. Rodrigo has never felt like a victim, but he acknowledges having experienced some examples of discrimination that, although they may seem insignificant to him, denote a society trapped in prejudice. “The first time I had contact with racism was at my paternal grandmother&#39;s house, who Whenever a white-skinned person arrived, he said that he had a beautiful color. My mother is dark, my paternal grandmother less so, but not as white as her sisters or her mother. I remember that she was once a girlfriend of one of my uncles, very white, and my grandmother told my mother: &#39;Look at that beautiful skin color, not like yours or mine&#39;. On the other hand, my grandmother never treated my mother badly and I, who have dark skin, was always the spoiled one”. Rodrigo also remembers an episode from his childhood in which he was verbally attacked by a girl from the neighborhood. of the. Rodrigo would have been about eight years old. It was a time of posadas and the children of the block went out to ask for posadas: “In one of those, one of the children of the block, who many of us did not like, had an accident with a candle. Nothing serious, just a little wax fell on his forehead. But I laughed. His cousin, a blonde by the way, got angry and she told me, what are you laughing at, fucking black? I didn&#39;t even feel alluded to (laughs). He wasn&#39;t black and he didn&#39;t understand why he wanted to insult me ​​with that, unlike another friend on the block named José, who was a mulatto and very clown. That one yes, when someone got angry he said &#39;soruyo&#39; and things like that”. Except for those episodes, Rodrigo does not feel that his skin color has been an issue in his life, but his way of speaking that for many is classified as a strawberry: “Since I was in elementary school they have called me &#39;strawberry&#39;, and there was a company in which a subject was bothering me all the time with that in a mocking way, and although it bothered me I did not feel attacked or like a victim . Interestingly, where I did feel that was when I entered UNAM, where a woman and several colleagues treated me in a derogatory manner. </title>
         <author>xoseluiscf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/xoseluiscf/Bookmarks/wish/2024319913</link>
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         <pubDate>2022-02-01 21:35:33 UTC</pubDate>
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