Siakam: Moving from Cameroon to becoming a minority in the U.S. was a ‘shock’
TORONTO — Pascal Siakam feels the suspicious eyes on him when he walks into upscale shops.
The Toronto Raptors forward said in his 10 years since moving from Cameroon, he’s come to expect the racial profiling he experiences living as a black man living in the United States. It’s bleak, but it’s a part of life he’s stopped being shocked by. And that fact alone is painful.
“Going to a store, people are looking at you a little different and wondering if you’re gonna buy something, they’re watching you a little bit. . . that definitely wouldn’t happen where I’m from,” said Siakam, who moved from Douala, Cameroon to the U.S. when he was 16.
“The sad part for me is being able to normalize it. I felt like OK, that’s just what happens when you’re that colour. . . I have to just accept the fact that people are going to look at me a little weird, and they’re gonna watch me a little bit.