Ultimately, I think that it is a sad commentary on certain individuals who feel the need to "latch on to" a culture when they find out that they have a minuscule percentage of that ethnicity in their background.
I remember a girl that I knew in my late 20's that somehow found out that she had a great, great grandmother that was 25% American Indian yet the rest of her was a blend of different European countries. She had such a lack of self identity that suddenly she was going to Indian pow-wows and immersing herself in American Indian culture (I can't remember what tribe) because it gave her a sense of belonging to something that she had never had.
Recently I was talking with an employee of mine who really is Native American (Navajo/Hopi) and he was joking about the number of people like her that show up at pow-wows trying sooooo hard to "look" Indian.
I remember a girl that I knew in my late 20's that somehow found out that she had a great, great grandmother that was 25% American Indian yet the rest of her was a blend of different European countries. She had such a lack of self identity that suddenly she was going to Indian pow-wows and immersing herself in American Indian culture (I can't remember what tribe) because it gave her a sense of belonging to something that she had never had.
Recently I was talking with an employee of mine who really is Native American (Navajo/Hopi) and he was joking about the number of people like her that show up at pow-wows trying sooooo hard to "look" Indian.
If I dress in a sari would someone come along and tell me I cant wear it cos I am not Indian?
What about white people who dress in cheongsam? It was the fashion!
Native americans wear truquoise beads..theyve become a fashion, as have Maori tattoos.