• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Africa: Where black is not really beautiful

jubilee1919

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Joined
Jul 30, 2011
Messages
2,589
Points
63
1 January 2013 Last updated at 00:42 GMT

Africa: Where black is not really beautiful

By Pumza Fihlani BBC News, Johannesburg

_65028879_65028878.jpg

Nomasonto Mnisi says her skin colour is "a self-esteem issue"

South Africa is marketed to the world as Mandela's rainbow nation, where everyone is proud of their race and heritage. But for some black South Africans there is such a thing as being too black.

A recent study by the University of Cape Town suggests that one woman in three in South Africa bleaches her skin. The reasons for this are as varied as the cultures in this country but most people say they use skin-lighteners because they want "white skin".

Local musician Nomasonto "Mshoza" Mnisi, now several shades lighter, says her new skin makes her feel more beautiful and confident.

She has been widely criticised in the local media and social networking sites for her appearance but the 30-year-old says skin-bleaching is a personal choice, no different from breast implants or a having nose job.

Nomasonto Mnisi: Before & After
_65030824_nomasonto_beforeandafter_46.jpg


"Part of it is a self-esteem issue and I have addressed that and I am happy now”
Nomasonto Mnisi
Musician

"I've been black and dark-skinned for many years, I wanted to see the other side. I wanted to see what it would be like to be white and I'm happy," she says candidly.

Over the past couple of years Ms Mnisi has had several treatments. Each session can cost around 5,000 rand (£360; $590), she tells the BBC.

Unlike many in the country, she uses high-end products which are believed to be safer than the creams sold on the black market but they are by no means risk-free, doctors say.

Costly beauty

Ms Mnisi says she does not understand the criticism about her new appearance.

"Yes, part of it is a self-esteem issue and I have addressed that and I am happy now. I'm not white inside, I'm not really fluent in English, I have black kids. I'm a township girl, I've just changed the way I look on the outside," she says.

The dangers associated with the use of some of these creams include blood cancers such as leukaemia and cancers of the liver and kidneys, as well as a severe skin condition called ochronosis, a form of hyper-pigmentation which causes the skin to turn a dark purple shade, according to senior researcher at the University of Cape Town, Dr Lester Davids.

"Very few people in South Africa and Africa know the concentration of the toxic compounds that are contained in the products on the black market and that is concerning. We need to do more to educate people about these dangerous products," says Dr Davids.

He says over the past six years there has been a significant increase in the number of skin lighteners flooding local markets, some of them legal and some illegal. This is what prompted their research.

Local dermatologists say they are seeing more and more patients whose skin has been damaged by years of bleaching - most of the time irreversibly.

"I'm getting patients from all over Africa needing help with treating their ochronosis. There is very little we can do to reverse the damage and yet people are still in denial about the side-effects of these products," says Dr Noora Moti-Joosub.

In many parts of Africa and Asia, lighter-skinned woman are considered more beautiful, are believed to be more successful and more likely to find marriage.

The origin of this belief in Africa is not clear, but researchers have linked it to Africa's colonial history where white skin was the epitome of beauty.

Some have also suggested that people from "brown nations" around the world tended to look down upon dark-skinned people.

'I don't like black skin'

The World Health Organization has reported that Nigerians are the highest users of such products: 77% of Nigerian women use the products on a regular basis. They are followed by Togo with 59%; South Africa with 35%; and Mali at 25%.

South Africa banned products containing more than 2% of hydroquinone - the most common active ingredient in in the 1980s. But it is easy to see creams and lotions containing the chemical on the stalls here. Some creams contain harmful steroids and others mercury.

While skin-lightening creams have been used by some South Africans for many years, they have become more common recently with the influx of people from countries such as Nigeria and Democratic Republic of Congo, where they are even more widespread.

_64307252_jackson.jpg

Studies have found that men are also beginning to bleach their skin

In a bustling African market in the centre of Yeoville in Johannesburg, it is skin lighteners galore. Walking through this community is like walking through a mini-Africa: you can find someone from any part of the continent here.

I notice that many of the women have uncharacteristically light skin faces while the rest of their bodies are darker. Some even have scabby burns on their cheeks from the harmful chemicals used to strip the skin of pigmentation. They don't want to speak openly about why they bleach their skin, or even have their pictures taken. Psychologists say there are also underlying reasons why people bleach their skin - but low self-esteem and, to some degree self-hate, are a common thread.

But skin-lightening is not just a fascination and obsession of women. Congolese hair stylist Jackson Marcelle says he has been using special injections to bleach his skin for the past 10 years. Each injection lasts for six months.

"I pray every day and I ask God, 'God why did you make me black?' I don't like being black. I don't like black skin," he tells me.

Mr Marcelle - known in this busy community as Africa's Michael Jackson - says his mother used to apply creams on him when he was young in order to make him appear "less black".

"I like white people. Black people are seen as dangerous; that's why I don't like being black. People treat me better now because I look like I'm white," he adds.

Entrenched in the minds of many Africans from a young age is the adage "if it's white, it's all right", a belief that has chipped away at the self-esteem of millions.

Until this changes, no amount of official bans or public information campaigns will stop people risking serious damage to their health in the pursuit of what they think is beauty.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-20444798
 
It is a well known fact that Afro american women hate their own natural curly hair. When you see the long flowing straight hair of black women in Hollywood, it's probably straightened using very strong chemicals, a wig or a weave.

In fact, India is one of the biggest human hair exporting countries to make wigs for black women in US.
 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/1m-4qxz08So" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Anyway some Chinese think black is beautiful will marry them.

chinese-man-with-black-african-women-02-560x719.jpg


chinese-man-with-black-african-women-560x373.jpg


chinese-man-with-black-african-women-06-560x419.jpg


chinese-man-with-black-african-women-09.jpg
 
Last edited:
to each their own. whatever make those black people happy.
 
>> it's probably straightened using very strong chemicals, a wig or a weave. In fact, India is one of the biggest human hair exporting countries to make wigs for black women in US.
<<

Now we know where the hair comes from....provided by brothers who walk into a police station with hair to sell :confused:
 
for sure she look better after she bleach her skin, niggers are ugly.
 
..but according to some specimen of Yellow & White women's motto: 'once you go BLack you never go back'..
;):eek:
 
It just shows that as a race,,these blacks are truly lacking in pride and low self esteem,,,,if not why they want to do such thing? its not the color of the skin that is ugly,,its their facial features and ugly hair do,,,and i heard the blacks really like fat women,,,
 
Last edited:
Even jamaica has this problem and they are constantly told to be proud of being african


Famous artist bleaches his entire body so that his tattoes look more visible

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/zYesBisfYXU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/sPOWyWz9b9c" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


Dem a bleach try to look like a browning from black to brown.
 
Back
Top