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Ask a Puerto Rican
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 19:03    Post subject: Ask a Puerto Rican Reply with quote

Frank, somebody, answer me this (I would categorize this as a question I've always wanted to ask, but was afraid to):

I've noticed that almost every Puerto Rican I meet claims to be half Italian. What's up with this?

I'm aware of the Corsican influx in the early 1800's, but combine it with the existing population, it's not enough to make everyone half Italian - even if it was, this influx occured before Italy became a county - where Corsica was part of Genoa, then later became part of France - so Corsicans weren't "Italian" back then anyway.

If I was to take the sample of Puerto Ricans I've met over my life, and apply the social microcosm theory, there aren't enough Italians in America to make that many Puerto Ricans half Italian.

Somebody clue me in.
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G-Man
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 20:07    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've never met a PR who claimed to have Italian ancestry, and I've met quite a few.
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 20:54    Post subject: Reply with quote

You remember that movie, Hangin' With the Homeboys? There was this character, Fernando (aka Vinny). Basically, he was a Puerto Rican posing as an Italian. I think that whoever wrote that movie was basing him off of a real observation.

I've met two of these posuers myself. One was telling me he was Italian - and I didn't believe it. I was talking to another guy who knew him, about what he mentioned growing up in Italy, and he laughs and tells me that this guy is Puerto Rican.

Another guy while I was stationed in Norfolk tried to do the same thing. Those who don't know any better think that Spanish and Italian are mutually intelligible (I can speak a little Italian myself, and am currently working on a fluency, but I don't speak any Spanish nor do I, personally, agree that these languages are mutually intelligible), but this guy's surname was Jaramillo (and he prounounced it "ha-ra-ME-yo" himself). I easily exposed this idiot (who later confessed to being mixed Puerto Rican/Mexican), and left him subject to ridicule for awhile.


Last edited by Richard Miller on Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:04; edited 1 time in total
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onlyhuman77
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 20:57    Post subject: Reply with quote

I just had my coworker review your question. Though she is Cuban/Puerto Rican she was born & raised in Puerto Rico considering herself Puerto Rican. She has been in the U.S. for about seven years. The heritage she recalls is Amerindian, Spain, and some African. None of her friends growing up ever claimed to have Italian ancestry. She was born in Rio Piedras, and raised in Bayamon.

However she does admit that most of her friends either had one parent or one grand parent that was of Cuban ancestry which may not be consistant with the rest of the commonwealth.
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:02    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well all the the Puerto Ricans with whom I've encountered this are "Nuyoricans," so maybe its a phenomena that exists there.
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OTHER
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:03    Post subject: Reply with quote

G-Man wrote:
I've never met a PR who claimed to have Italian ancestry, and I've met quite a few.


Same here. Most of the Puerto Ricans I know lived in South Jersey, but some had moved there from PA, NY, and some straight from PR. Others were born and raised in South Jersey. I've never heard of the Italian ancestry phenomenon nor the attempt to pass themselves off as Italian. How successful would a Puerto Rican be at passing themselves off as Italian in a city full of Italians, such as NYC? Not very, I'm guessing. Laughing I know it wouldn't have worked in Atlantic City. Although phenotype and language may seem similar, I think most people in cities like Atlantic City and New York City can tell the difference between a Puerto Rican and an Italian.


Last edited by OTHER on Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:09; edited 1 time in total
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:08    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have a friend who's Dominican, and lives in New York. While she can't speak for PR's on this one, she says that there are Domincans who do this as well in order to explain their dark skin and curly hair (both of those normally far exceeding those of Italians - I personally never saw a Dominican do it though); however, I've seen Puerto Ricans who don't even have dark skin or curly hair do it.

By the way, Ricky Martin claims to be half Italian.
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OTHER
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:12    Post subject: Reply with quote

Richard Miller wrote:


By the way, Ricky Martin claims to be half Italian.


Are you sure about that?
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:16    Post subject: Reply with quote

OTHER wrote:
Richard Miller wrote:


By the way, Ricky Martin claims to be half Italian.


Are you sure about that?


Someone had posted a link to it on mulatto.org, I can't recall.
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onlyhuman77
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 21:25    Post subject: Reply with quote

My best friend is Puerto Rican and he claims Italian jokingly, but that is only with us his friends we joke a great deal about our different cultural backgrounds. But if anyone questions his background, he has no shame since he is a proud Puerto Rican.

I am thinking born and raised Americans who have Puerto Rican heritage are the ones responsible for claiming Italian heritage. I have encountered enough Puerto Ricans to conclude that many of them (not all) do have an Italian look. Combining that with not being taught about your Puerto Rican background, and having so many Italians living so close to Puerto Ricans in places like NYC it makes sense that some Puerto Ricans would conclude that they have Italian Ancestry.
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fwsweet
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PostPosted: Thu 18 Sep 2008 22:49    Post subject: Re: Ask a Puerto Rican Reply with quote

Richard Miller wrote:
I've noticed that almost every Puerto Rican I meet claims to be half Italian. What's up with this?

Beats hell out of me. I don't know any Puerto Ricans who are part Italian. I have an uncle whose family came from Corsica (surname Bartolomei), but I am not sure if Corsican counts as Italian.
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divana
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PostPosted: Fri 19 Sep 2008 12:56    Post subject: Reply with quote

Never heard that claim before...
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CIMMERIAN
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PostPosted: Tue 30 Sep 2008 16:51    Post subject: Reply with quote

Richard Miller wrote:
I have a friend who's Dominican, and lives in New York. While she can't speak for PR's on this one, she says that there are Domincans who do this as well in order to explain their dark skin and curly hair (both of those normally far exceeding those of Italians - I personally never saw a Dominican do it though); however, I've seen Puerto Ricans who don't even have dark skin or curly hair do it.

By the way, Ricky Martin claims to be half Italian.

Question Majority of Dominicans are of tri-racial ancestry (Euro/Afro/Amerind.), Italians are 100% European, it would be a minority of Dominicans who's phenotype would overlap with even the stereotypical darkest of Italians (Sicilians). Add to that that they are both abundant in the same areas, this makes no sense at all.
I am Dominican and have been raised in the NYC/NJ area, I have never seen this in my life. It sounds like pure comedy.
Same goes for Puerto Ricans, never seen it or heard about it.
"Dark skin+curly hair' does not=Italian ancestry.
The only people from LatinAmerica that have claimed Italian or Italian ancestry are Argentines who do have it.
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Thu 02 Oct 2008 20:00    Post subject: Reply with quote

Okay, here's another one I can think of:

Why do Puerto Rican women like Betty Boop so much?
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onlyhuman77
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PostPosted: Fri 03 Oct 2008 17:02    Post subject: Reply with quote

Richard Miller wrote:
Okay, here's another one I can think of:

Why do Puerto Rican women like Betty Boop so much?


I asked my Puerto Rican Coworker, she does not really care for Betty Boop, then I asked other Coworkers (Greek, African American) and same reaction, but all loved and still love Hello Kitty
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Sat 04 Oct 2008 20:18    Post subject: Reply with quote

onlyhuman77 wrote:

I asked my Puerto Rican Coworker, she does not really care for Betty Boop, then I asked other Coworkers (Greek, African American) and same reaction, but all loved and still love Hello Kitty


Yeah, but I've seen so much Puerto Rican memorabilia that has Betty Boop on it - bumperstickers, t-shirts, you name it.
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Richard Miller
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PostPosted: Sun 05 Oct 2008 02:23    Post subject: Reply with quote

And by the way, these are just a few of the HUNDREDS of images out there. And so I ask again, what's with Puerto Ricans and Betty Boop?













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sir alcal
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PostPosted: Wed 08 Oct 2008 13:38    Post subject: Reply with quote

CIMMERIAN wrote:

Question Majority of Dominicans are of tri-racial ancestry (Euro/Afro/Amerind.), Italians are 100% European, it would be a minority of Dominicans who's phenotype would overlap with even the stereotypical darkest of Italians (Sicilians). Add to that that they are both abundant in the same areas, this makes no sense at all.
I am Dominican and have been raised in the NYC/NJ area, I have never seen this in my life. It sounds like pure comedy.
Same goes for Puerto Ricans, never seen it or heard about it.
"Dark skin+curly hair' does not=Italian ancestry.


That's not true. Average italians are something like 40% not european(mostly semitic and berber), and almost all italians i know have curly hair. Most straight them yet. Some italians have even dark skin, but they are few. (about 1 out 20)

That's Chiara Cainero (northen italian)

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3277/2763609187_3175e052d9.jpg?v=0

CIMMERIAN wrote:
The only people from LatinAmerica that have claimed Italian or Italian ancestry are Argentines who do have it.


False, italians migrated in all latin america, mostly in Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina. Peru, Cuba, Mexico, Venezuela and Colombia have their italian population too.
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sir alcal
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PostPosted: Wed 08 Oct 2008 13:41    Post subject: Re: Ask a Puerto Rican Reply with quote

Richard Miller wrote:
Frank, somebody, answer me this (I would categorize this as a question I've always wanted to ask, but was afraid to):

I've noticed that almost every Puerto Rican I meet claims to be half Italian. What's up with this?

I'm aware of the Corsican influx in the early 1800's, but combine it with the existing population, it's not enough to make everyone half Italian - even if it was, this influx occured before Italy became a county - where Corsica was part of Genoa, then later became part of France - so Corsicans weren't "Italian" back then anyway.

If I was to take the sample of Puerto Ricans I've met over my life, and apply the social microcosm theory, there aren't enough Italians in America to make that many Puerto Ricans half Italian.

Somebody clue me in.


Actually the only puerto rican i've seen in my life, declared to have an italian ancestry. If Puerto Rican have an italian ancestry, it's less than 5%.
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CIMMERIAN
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PostPosted: Wed 08 Oct 2008 18:40    Post subject: Reply with quote

sir alcal wrote:
CIMMERIAN wrote:

Question Majority of Dominicans are of tri-racial ancestry (Euro/Afro/Amerind.), Italians are 100% European, it would be a minority of Dominicans who's phenotype would overlap with even the stereotypical darkest of Italians (Sicilians). Add to that that they are both abundant in the same areas, this makes no sense at all.
I am Dominican and have been raised in the NYC/NJ area, I have never seen this in my life. It sounds like pure comedy.
Same goes for Puerto Ricans, never seen it or heard about it.
"Dark skin+curly hair' does not=Italian ancestry.


That's not true. Average italians are something like 40% not european(mostly semitic and berber), and almost all italians i know have curly hair. Most straight them yet. Some italians have even dark skin, but they are few. (about 1 out 20)

That's Chiara Cainero (northen italian)

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3277/2763609187_3175e052d9.jpg?v=0

CIMMERIAN wrote:
The only people from LatinAmerica that have claimed Italian or Italian ancestry are Argentines who do have it.


False, italians migrated in all latin america, mostly in Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina. Peru, Cuba, Mexico, Venezuela and Colombia have their italian population too.


Since your location states Italy I am either guessing English is not your first language and/or you've not read my post correctly.
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