- Gigi Hadid discussed her mixed-race identity in an interview that i-D published on Monday.
- The model said she's previously grappled with feeling "too white" to speak about her Arab roots.
- Hadid says she hopes her and Zayn Malik's daughter discovers her own identity without pressure.
- Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.
Gigi Hadid said her light features have caused her to grapple with questions about her mixed-race identity in an interview i-D published Monday.
The 26-year-old supermodel was raised by her father Mohamed Hadid, who is Palestinian, and her mother Yolanda Hadid, who is Dutch. While Hadid identifies equally with both sides, she said she's spent time "trying to figure out" where she fits in.
"In certain situations, I feel – or I'm made to feel – that I'm too white to stand up for part of my Arab heritage." she told the outlet.
Hadid recalled asking herself: "Is what I am, or what I have, enough to do what I feel is right? But then, also, is that taking advantage of the privilege of having the whiteness within me, right? Am I allowed to speak for this side of me, or is that speaking on something that I don't experience enough to know?"
Conversations regarding race and identity have become commonplace between the model and her boyfriend Zayn Malik, who has a mother of English-Irish descent and a Pakistani father.
"We think about it and talk about it a lot as partners and it's something that's really important to us, but it's also something that we first experienced ourselves," Hadid said.
She continued, "We are that first generation of those mixed races, and then that comes with that first generational experience of being like, 'Oh damn, I'm the bridge.'"
The couple has been in an on-again, off-again relationship since 2015. And after welcoming their first child Khai together in September 2020, the couple began brainstorming how to handle topics like race, ethnicity, and religion within their family.
Hadid's hope is that Khai will be an active part of their discussions and find her own identity without any external pressure.
"I think that Khai will grow up feeling out the way that she can or wants to be a bridge for her different ethnicities. But I think that it will be nice to be able to have those conversations, and see where she comes from [with] it, without us putting that onto her," Hadid said.
She added, "What comes from her is what I'm most excited about, and being able to add to that or answer her questions, you know?"
Earlier this year, Hadid told Vogue that she and Malik plan to expose Khai to multiple faiths, taking "different pieces" of "different religions."
"I think that just giving your child the opportunity to explore different interests is such a beautiful thing," she explained.
Khai's diverse background is reflected in the names she'll call her four grandparents, the model said.
Mohamed will go by "Jido" (Arabic for "grandpa") and Yolanda will be "Oma" ("grandmother" in Dutch).
Malik's father Yaser Malik will be nicknamed "Abu" ("father" in Urdu, the national language of Pakistan) and his mother Trisha Malik will be called "Nini" (the British word for "Nana").
Hadid has previously spoken about struggling with her mixed-race identity.
After the model faced accusations of cultural appropriation for wearing a hijab on the inaugural cover of Vogue Arabia in 2018, she defended herself and said that she and her siblings, Bella Hadid and Anward Hadid, are proud Arabs.
"When I shot the cover of Vogue Arabia, I wasn't 'Arab enough' to be representing those girls, even though I'm half-Palestinian," Hadid reportedly said during a Reebok event in Australia.
She continued, "I'm as Palestinian as I am Dutch. Just because I have blonde hair, I still carry the value of my ancestors and I appreciate and respect that."