Summer Heat...What Do I Do With My Hair?
Malena Amusa -- www.RaceWire.org -- The Colorlines Blog
wrote:
http://www.racewire.org/archives/2007/06/black_hair_redux.html#comments
Summer's here! And for many Black women, it's a time when the weather's too hot to tuck a bad-hair-day under a knit-cap, or to wrestle in a steaming salon chair for hours straightening or braiding or texturizing our hair.
For us, summer brings back hair talks, and I can promise you, more women will get dramatic cuts to "be through with it all," or long, European weaves "because I just want something that moves in the wind," this summer than any other season.
So the moment is fit now to revisit this tangle and the hair politic.
Meet blogger Karen Halliburton. She's dedicated a recent blog to putting Black women's latest hair trend--long, hair weaves--in context. "Nappy...the other N word," subtitles the blog that has a picture of handcuffs next to a flattening iron at the top, making the blog a virtual campaign for nappy-hair appreciation.
This week, I asked Karen to write about the blog that I thought was hysterically blunt, historical and entertaining. At least, it's the first I've seen to deal aggressively with our hair--a symbolic and real site of white privilege's clash with Black heritage.
Karen writes:
I have always been fascinated with Black women’s hair. Because our kink is unlike any other race on the planet. So there’s a positive reason. But how we are ever going to see this, I'm not sure. Especially now as more and more keep their kinkiness on the down low; hiding up under weaves, wigs, and perms.This is why I started my blog – www.KarenHalliburton.com – Politics of Black Hair ….Nappy: the other N word -- because Sisters are simply out of control with this fabricated chaos. We’re weaving it to death. Fake fraud perms and hideous hair pieces. Now, mind you, I’m an imposter, too. Presently, I wear my hair in braided extensions. And when I wear my hair without the imitation, it is pressed. I, like many other sisters are perpetuating the Eurocentric standard of beauty – be it long, mock up human hair extensions or make-believe straight hair.
We (me included) are wimps when it relates to unlocking the repression and denial…our identity crisis is managing us instead of vice versa.
I await the day we stop repressing our…gravity-defying…sun-reaching natural texture. We must embrace our beautiful textured napestry.
‘Cause no matter how hard we try, the kink can not be killed, destroyed or obliterated – every time, it comes back. Indisputably….the kink rules. We just haven’t claimed our crown yet.
Now, I know. Some of you are thinking: here we go again. When are these women gonna leave there hair alone? But I'll be insistent about this. Black hair is one of the most resilient reflections of our political climate and it has been throughout time.
So my question is, when it comes to social change, where do we start-- at the root or the tips?
Yes, Sisters as Malena so eloquently put it --Where do we start? At the root or the tips?
It doesn't matter where you start - just start - I decided to do what they do - just wear my hair as it is - no straightening- get up & comb it - wash it & let it dry - just do it - let them stare & smile back - claim the naps & love them - it is our heritage
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Every tyrant who has lived has believed in freedom for himself.
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One thing I can tell you is this, that I am not a methodical writer.
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what saddens me as an African woman is how out of touch black american women are with their ancestry, not just because it was stolen from them by slavery but also by their own persistent ignorance. Africans first started weaving, braiding our hair in 3500 BC. This is not some new fangled fad we have adopted to imitate white women or due to a lack of pride in our hair and heritage it was because we loved our hair and it's diversity. Styles worn by women in Africa often show and affiliation with our tribe or clan. I wear weaves because it was a tradition handed down through my Ugandan family over hundreds of generations and I wear it with pride and a deep love and respect for my heritage. Other women from other tribes wear their hair bald or in afros i honour and respect the symbol of their clan. So black women in America remember this you are of African descent, wear your hair as you please wig, weave, bald whatever and wear it with love in your heart. Stop dissing yourselves and the women of other tribes. Just because you don't know your history dose not mean that the spirit of your ancestors is not still influencing your choices trough the DNA they gave you. Do what you feel is right and honour them with dignity. America stamped out the beautiful traditions of the Native American people with their superiority don't stamp out your own because some black women are to ignorant to pick up a history book and read it or get on a plane back to Africa and find out the truth of where they came from.
I send you love and blessings cause you seem to find it really hard to bless yourselves.
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