freediver wrote on May 4
th, 2012 at 4:24pm:
If a white woman married to a white man gave birth to a black baby who looked remarkably like the gardener, people would know she had been sleeping around.
Sometimes white parents can have black children. Sometimes people have unknown black ancestry like this South African woman born to white parents:
The black woman - with white parents
http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2003/mar/17/features11.g21955
http://api.ning.com/files/g92Ux971YI3SISpCBLDcOUd4iXnfW*pRnBZavZ5KHM4a9j-wFGUPGa2aRwKZYuIU7LFMU9payQj6MMn5zm1ikorEH5*zgZ-v/PH2007052501036.jpgwidth=721
2009
Quote:Her parents, Abraham and Sannie Laing, were white - indeed, as members of the Nationalist Party, they were fervent supporters of South Africa's apartheid regime - and yet their daughter undeniably looked black, with her brown skin and tightly curled hair.
Her African features were almost certainly a throwback to an unknown ancestor whose DNA, having lain dormant for generations, had emerged in her. But when Sandra was a schoolgirl, this aspect of genetics was unknown and there was no such thing as a DNA test...
...For Abraham, the idea that his wife might have consorted with a black man, making him the most humiliated of cuckolds, was unthinkable (under South Africa's Immorality Acts, it was illegal to have sex with, or even kiss, a member of another race).
Unpleasant, but far more bearable was the suggestion that he or his wife had a non-white branch near the root of their family tree.
'If her appearance is due to some "coloured blood" in either of us, then it must be very far back among our forebears, and neither of us is aware of it,' he declared.
Such an argument turns out to be entirely conceivable. According to research published in the early Seventies, about 8 per cent of the genes of any modern Afrikaner are non-white.
More recent studies put the number slightly higher, at 11 per cent. Of the 25,000 or so genes that determine inheritable characteristics, only a tiny fraction have to do with skin colour, hair texture and other visible markers of race.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1093674/The-tragic-story-white-girl-born-black-tore-family-apart.html