Backstage at Dakar Fashion Week a group of young women squeeze into impossibly high heels while others sit still as make-up artists paint their eyelids a shining emerald color.
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All legs and cheekbones, the models are subject to the same pressures as their counterparts walking runways in London, Paris, and New York. And perhaps more.
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Like many women from the streets of Senegal, some fashion models in West Africa have bleached their skin, seeking to achieve a “cafDe au lait†color regarded by some as the esthetic ideal.
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This year, however, Senegal’s marquee fashion event is making a stand against the damaging practice.
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“I am against it,†said Adama Ndiaye, better known as Adama Paris, who started the annual fashion fete in 2002.
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Ndiaye announced at the opening of Dakar Fashion Week that she had banned any models using skin depigmentation cream from participating in the six-day event.
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A local newspaper, Sud Quotidian, claimed more than 60 percent of Senegalese women use skin bleaching products for non-medical reasons.
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Women of all classes and education levels use these often unregulated skin creams. Well-heeled and unshod women across Senegal bare the tell-tale signs of long-term bleaching - blotches of discolored skin on their arms and faces.
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“I’m trying to teach them to like themselves,†said Ndiaye of the natural-toned models selected for this year’s show.
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Self-esteem is not the only issue at stake, according to dermatologist Fatoumata Ly.
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“In my practice, I see a huge number of women with complications from this practice,†Ly said.
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Women often use prescription-strength corticosteroid creams to lighten their skin, she said.
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“When absorbed into the blood stream, corticosteroids pose serious risks, particularly for the heart,†she said. Skin cancer is also a potential side effect.
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This year’s collections emphasized sleek minimalist designs, in forceful primary colors and jet blacks, with designs targeting international women. Models strutted in towering Louboutin platform pumps down a runway inside a luxurious nightclub.
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The African designers showcasing their talents hailed Ndiaye’s public stance at the event, which ended on Sunday.
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Sophie Nzinga Sy, a couturier educated at the prestigious Parsons School of Design in New York, was infuriated when she saw huge billboards promoting skin lightening products springing up around Dakar.
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“It was ridiculous,†she said of the blanched face used in the advertising campaign. “Our skin is something that we should value.â€
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Sidling nervously between hair and make-up stations, models also expressed their support for Ndiaye’s initiative. “I think it’s a great idea,†said Dorinex Mboumba. “It will discourage others from the practice.â€
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“We don’t need to change the color of our skin to be beautiful.â€
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For Ndiaye herself, the stand against skin bleaching largely boils down to esthetics.
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“It’s not even pretty,†she said. “For me, it’s just a turn off.†[Read More]
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Source: VOA News: Economy and Finance
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