AITA for giving my son an “ethnic” name from my family background?

A new father named his three-month-old son “Hamza” because he and his wife simply liked how it sounded. What seemed like a joyful and personal decision soon turned into an uncomfortable workplace debate when two coworkers accused him of cultural appropriation and questioned his religious consistency.

The father, who has Mexican roots and Lebanese heritage through his maternal grandfather, found himself defending both his background and his parenting choice. When the criticism escalated into repeated remarks about religion and identity, he firmly asked his coworker to stop bringing it up. Now he is left wondering whether setting that boundary made him the unreasonable one.

AITA for giving my son an “ethnic” name from my family background?’

A simple baby name choice unexpectedly sparked workplace tension.

I (30s M) recently became a dad. My son (3mo) is named “Hamza.” I honestly picked this name just because I liked it. My wife couldn’t think of any boy...

A little on our background: I’m Mexican (standard mestizo), but my maternal grandfather was Lebanese. My wife is white with a little bit of Native American. We are Catholic but...

Two coworkers began questioning the name and his heritage.

Well, two of my coworkers (“Marie” and “Jessica”) have started making n__ty remarks about my son’s name. They said I was culturally appropriating and being r__ist.

I’m usually a good sport about such discussions, and I shared that I’m actually a quarter Lebanese from my grandfather. They then switched tact, and they pointed out that it’s...

The situation escalated during a work drive, prompting a firm boundary.

Jessica, especially, kept pressing the issue, and I was stuck with her the other day when we were driving to the worksite. She told me that I “wanted the good...

I told her that Lebanese people can be any religion, and the islamophobia thing is just a red herring. I also forbade her to bring it up again. Was I...

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I don’t think I did anything wrong by naming my son Hamza, but everyone around me is making me doubt my sanity.

In this case, the father selected a name connected to his ancestry and one he genuinely liked. His coworkers framed the issue around cultural appropriation and religion, shifting arguments when presented with factual clarification. The tension highlights a broader misunderstanding between ethnicity and religion. Arabic names are not exclusive to one faith, and Lebanese identity encompasses multiple religious backgrounds.

There is also a professional boundary concern. Workplace conversations about someone’s child’s name can easily become intrusive when they evolve into moral judgments. Repeatedly challenging a colleague’s cultural legitimacy or religious alignment may create discomfort and even cross into inappropriate conduct. While discussions about identity can be meaningful, persistence after a clear explanation can feel less like dialogue and more like criticism.

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From a broader social perspective, multicultural families often navigate layered identities. Heritage does not always align neatly with assumptions others make. The key issue here may be less about the name itself and more about respect for personal choices and the limits of workplace debate.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Many commenters strongly supported the father’s decision and boundary.

MaximumPlant − NTA I think they’re just looking for excuses The fact they pivoted from it being “r__ist” to now it being a violation of some kind of fictional religious...

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Ngl Jessica seems a bit r__ist herself by assuming all Lebanese people are a religious monolith. Hamza is a wonderful and completely appropriate name choice. Best of luck dealing with...

kFisherman − NTA. This is what happened to me and I am glad my Dad gave me an ethnic name that is unique regardless of any religious connotations it might...

joanclaytonesq − NTA. Your coworkers are seriously overstepping here. Also they are conflating religion and ethnicity. Hamza isn't a Muslim name. It's an Arabic name.

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I know this isn't your actual kids name, but I'm assuming it's similar enough for this to be the case. Many people regardless of their faith speak Arabic.

It is possible to be both Catholic and Arabic. I don't know why your colleagues are so concerned with your kid's name, but they need to keep it to themselves.

You are totally within your rights to say that you no longer want to discuss this topic with them. ETA: congrats on your new baby!

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raerae6672 − NTA I am so sick of people using "cultural appropriation" to be self-righteous idiots. You liked the name and decided it was a good name for your son....

You were right to tell her to stop and not to bring it up again. They are being rude and have no idea what they are speaking of. You and...

She has no idea about Lebanese culture and is making a generalization to justify her non-point. You and your wife owe absolutely no explanation for the name of your child....

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Others emphasized workplace boundaries and practical next steps.

OG_Tojanman − NTA. Man s__ew those ladies. You can name your kid whatever you want and they have zero right to provide any input.

They don't get to pass judgement on your kids name and they certainly don't get to question the reasons why you chose that name.

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I'd be marching down to HR with the quickness since they're now bringing race and religion into the mix. Bunch of nosy harpies can't even distinguish the DIFFERENCE between race...

fuzzy_mic − NTA - start hanging around nicer people.

Ok_Smell_8260 − NTA. A fine name, and your co-workers should grow up

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One commenter passionately defended his heritage and choice.

AshesB77 − NTA. At all. Your coworkers are being inappropriate. You’ve warned her to stop. Let’s hope they listen.

revmat − NTA. Sorry your coworkers are r__ist. It's a nice name and it is a part of your family heritage. FWIW most of the Lebanese people I know are...

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[Reddit User] − NTA. A girl named Jessica (white as white can be) does not get to lecture a Mexican/Arab man about cultural appropriation. You named your kid after your...

No one would bat an eye if a white girl like me named my kid after my grandma, or gave my kid a Polish name, even tho I'm half Irish...

No one would say I'm appropriating polish culture because I'm only half polish and not polish enough. Who says that? That's crazy. Wtf is wrong with her?

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People really need to learn how to mind thier own god damn business. You can't appropriate your own DNA. Your grandparents are like half your genetics.

They make your parents. Your DNA and all it's cultures belong to you just as it belongs to your son and just as it belonged to your grandfather. It makes...

Why does she think you need her permission to name your own child? Why is she is gatekeeper of other people's ethnicities? This girl knows nothing about "Islamophobia" with a...

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Nor does she know what it's like to be treated like a Mexican American or an Arab American America or what racism feels like. Someone who looks like you knows.

Our country is equally awful to both races of people. You are fucked either way regardless if people think you are one or another. You are going to experience racism...

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And as someone who was raised in a Turkish School I can confidently tell you that Arab people look like everything from fully European to pretty much black.

There is a huge amount of genetic and color diversity in the middle east. The damn thing spans from Greece to North Africa for fucks sake.

There is no "Muslim look". Anyone can be Muslim. Anyone can be middle eastern genetically without being Muslim. Middle easterners can look white as hell, have blonde hair,

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and blue eyes (very common in turkey) and still be equally "Islamic" as someone who is dark skinned, dark eyed, and black haired. You look like both and you experience...

She's never experienced any of those things and I'm willing to bet my life on it. She's not an expert on racism or cultural appropriation. This is virtue signaling to...

She's an i__ot who knows nothing. Don't listen to her and file a complaint with HR if she keeps harassing you and being r__ist.

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She is being r__ist. She's talking down to a person of color about thier own heritage, telling them they don't count because they aren't "Muslim enough", and bashing them for...

That's r__ist as f__k. Who is some white girl to determine how mixed you are or what you can identify as? You are all of it.

It's all yours to do with as you please. S__ew her. I'm mad FOR you. This post has me hot. I for real want to yell at Jessica. She's being...

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This situation reflects how quickly personal parenting choices can become public debates about identity. The father chose a name tied to his heritage and personal taste, while coworkers interpreted it through their own assumptions about culture and religion. When he set a clear boundary, the disagreement shifted from discussion to workplace tension.

Should coworkers comment on a colleague’s child’s name at all? Where is the line between curiosity and intrusion? And how should multicultural families respond when others question their heritage? Share your thoughts.

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