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Subject:
From:
VERA R CROWELL <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
African Association of Madison <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 22 May 2007 15:39:12 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (288 lines)
*****************************************************************

AFRICA FEST 2007 - AUGUST 11, 2007 at WARNER PARK

Join African Association of Madison, Inc. for $25 per year:Oct - Sept.

Mail check to: AAM, PO Box 1016, Madison, WI 53701
Phone: 608-258-0261 -- Email: [log in to unmask]
Web: www.AfricanAssociation.org

*****************************************************************

Just because a person keeps their hair 'natural' does not mean that it is still not subject to considerable damage from combing, brushing, styling, and the elements. Black people's hair is the most fragile hair on the planet...it damages much more easily than hair from other cultures. Also, just because hair is natural doesn't mean you won't spend time on it...natural hair requires much more time and care to style. I don't have the time; I like to change my hairstyle frequently and it's difficult to do that with natural hair. Too much braiding and leaving braids in too long weakens the hair; plus, you can't wash it as often as it prefers if it's braided for a long time.

******************************
"In the days before volcanoes were invented, lava had to be hand carried down from the mountains and poured on the sleeping villagers.
This took a great deal of time." 

----- Original Message -----
From: Joe Brewoo <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Tuesday, May 22, 2007 3:19 pm
Subject: Re: Film Encourages Africans and African Americans to Cultivate Natural Hair
To: [log in to unmask]


> *****************************************************************
> 
> AFRICA FEST 2007 - AUGUST 11, 2007 at WARNER PARK
> 
> Join African Association of Madison, Inc. for $25 per year:Oct - Sept.
> 
> Mail check to: AAM, PO Box 1016, Madison, WI 53701
> Phone: 608-258-0261 -- Email: [log in to unmask]
> Web: www.AfricanAssociation.org
> 
> *****************************************************************
> 
> Vera,
> Do you agree that we should keep our kinky hairs as kinky as ever and 
> stop this chemical manipulations??????????
> I wish our mothers, sisters, wives, daughters and some of our brothers 
> (Al Sharpton) will agree......... Say it loud, am black and kinky.
> Joe
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: VERA R CROWELL <[log in to unmask]>
> Reply-To: African Association of Madison <[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Film Encourages Africans and African Americans to 
> Cultivate Natural Hair
> Date: Tue, 22 May 2007 15:09:35 -0500
> *****************************************************************
> 
> AFRICA FEST 2007 - AUGUST 11, 2007 at WARNER PARK
> 
> Join African Association of Madison, Inc. for $25 per year:Oct - Sept.
> 
> Mail check to: AAM, PO Box 1016, Madison, WI 53701
> Phone: 608-258-0261 -- Email: [log in to unmask]
> Web: www.AfricanAssociation.org
> 
> *****************************************************************
> 
> "“I was inspired to do the film because I put a relaxer (chemical) on 
> my daughter’s hair when she was six years old, and it all fell 
> out. As a result, to make her feel comfortable, I ended up cutting all 
> of my relaxed hair off and going natural with her. And it was a 
> journey that took me all the way to here (to the Austin Women’s Film Festival).”
> 
> Six years old is too young to relax the hair. Of course it fell out.
> 
> ******************************
> "In the days before volcanoes were invented, lava had to be hand 
> carried down from the mountains and poured on the sleeping villagers.
> This took a great deal of time."
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Aggo Akyea <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: Tuesday, May 22, 2007 2:59 pm
> Subject: Film Encourages Africans and African Americans to Cultivate 
> Natural Hair
> To: [log in to unmask]
> 
> 
> > *****************************************************************
> >
> > AFRICA FEST 2007 - AUGUST 11, 2007 at WARNER 
> PARK
> >
> > Join African Association of Madison, Inc. for $25 per year:Oct - Sept.
> >
> > Mail check to: AAM, PO Box 1016, Madison, WI 53701
> > Phone: 608-258-0261 -- Email: [log in to unmask]
> > Web: www.AfricanAssociation.org
> >
> > *****************************************************************
> >
> > Film Encourages Africans and African Americans to Cultivate Natural
> > Hair
> >
> > By Darren Taylor
> > Washington
> > 22 May 2007
> > http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Film-Encourages-Africans-and-African-Americans-to-Cultivate-Natural-Hair.cfm
> >
> > US singer Macy Gray and 'big hair' ... The film, 'New Growth',
> > advocates for 'natural' hairstyles
> >
> > The city of Austin in the United States has hosted an international
> > film festival at which several works with 
> Africa-related themes were
> > shown. One that received a lot of attention was a documentary produced
> > by an African-American filmmaker, Michelle Farris-Lewis. She uses her
> > film to celebrate people of African descent who’ve refused to
> > straighten their hair in favor of “going natural.” In the second of 
> a
> > five-part series focusing on Africa-related films that were shown at
> > the Austin festival, VOA’s Darren Taylor reports on Farris-Lewis’s
> > film, entitled “New Growth.”
> >
> > Michelle Farris-Lewis is a native of South Park, an inner city area 
> of
> > Houston, Texas, where she filmed the documentary that received an
> > enthusiastic round of applause from the audience in Austin.
> >
> > But Farris-Lewis says she filmed “New Growth” with Africans in mind 
> as
> > well.
> >
> > “So many Africans think the way 
> that we African-Americans do: That
> > they must have nice, straight hair in order to be accepted, in order
> > to get good jobs,” she explains.
> >
> > “The film is actually comprised of what I call hair stories, of women
> > who have taken this journey from relaxed (straight) hair to natural
> > hair – that’s one part of the film. And then the other is the opinions
> > of other people, like men – I make sure I go to barbershops and I get
> > their opinions and the way they feel about hair, because a lot of the
> > things that we do to our hair as women has to do with the men in our
> > lives.”
> >
> > In one of the most striking scenes in the film, shot in a Houston
> > barbershop packed with men – and testosterone – a young man having his
> > hair cut reflects: “As far as I’ve always been brought up and what
> > we’ve been 
> taught, is that the only good hair is hair you can run your
> > fingers through. If you can’t run your fingers through it, then it
> > ain’t good hair.”
> >
> > “Comments such as this,” says Farris-Lewis, “reveal the social
> > conditioning that black people all over the world have undergone….
> > There’s a ‘good hair, bad hair’ thing going on in black communities.
> > It’s like if you have the wavy, close to Caucasian, European hair –
> > that it’s good. And as close as it is to African – the kinky – then
> > it’s bad.”
> >
> > During another scene in the film, an elderly man emotionally laments
> > that black people have lost their “respect” by straightening their hair.
> >
> > “Some of you all remember that, back in the day, when we were brothers
> > and sisters – soul people – we were wearing it natural! People
> > 
> respected us! The Hispanics respected us, the Asians respected us; the
> > white man respected us! We don’t have that respect left!” he exclaims,
> > to the agreement of the men around him.
> >
> > “New Growth” includes footage of women and men, who, according to a
> > pamphlet promoting the film, are “reveling in their own process – a
> > process that does not involve chemicals or complex salon treatments,
> > but a processing of the mind that allows one the freedom to embrace
> > who they are naturally and to be proud.”
> >
> > What happens in America is the same as what happens in Africa, says
> > Farris-Lewis: “Black people putting dangerous, damaging products on
> > their hair to straighten it, to look white, because society makes them
> > feel inferior, makes them feel that their natural hair is dirty. And
> > they’re willing 
> to go through great pain, and spend a lot of money, so
> > that they feel they fit into society by means of their hairstyles.”
> >
> > A “personal and traumatic experience” spurred Farris-Lewis to produce
> > “New Growth.”
> >
> > “I was inspired to do the film because I put a relaxer (chemical) on
> > my daughter’s hair when she was six years old, and it all fell out. 
> As
> > a result, to make her feel comfortable, I ended up cutting all of my
> > relaxed hair off and going natural with her. And it was a journey that
> > took me all the way to here (to the Austin Women’s Film Festival).”
> >
> > She says the “dangerous” standards of beauty that are thrust upon
> > people – and especially women – in America, are disseminated through
> > various media – like Hollywood and music videos – and then spread to
> > 
> Africa.
> >
> > “African women see these images, and they aspire to copy Americans.
> > They put all sorts of damaging products on their hair. They begin to
> > believe, like we do here, that women can only be beautiful if they
> > have long, shiny, flowing hair.”
> >
> > In “New Growth,” Farris-Lewis also interviews African-American women
> > who are refusing to “go natural” and are insisting that they have a
> > right to straighten their hair.
> >
> > In a revealing comment in the film, a woman with straight hair
> > provides viewers with some of the psychology and societal standards
> > behind her decision to continually relax her curly hair: “When I do
> > get my hair straightened like this, the first thing that a lot of
> > people say is: Oh, your hair is so pretty…. Instead of every day when
> > I wear it out and bushy 
> and curly, I never get any compliments.”
> >
> > Farris-Lewis repeatedly emphasizes that her film is not intended to
> > criticize those women of African descent who choose to straighten
> > their hair.
> >
> > “The film is just a celebration of women who have decided: I don’t
> > want to do that anymore; I just want to be me and be what God made me.
> > It’s not really to condemn anyone that has chosen to relax their hair,
> > but just to celebrate those who’ve chosen not to,” she says.
> >
> > Farris-Lewis also insists that she’s not advocating a “return to the
> > 1970’s, with massive Afro hairdos or that everyone must look like Bob
> > Marley…. Natural doesn’t have to be Afro, huge hair. Natural is just
> > something without chemicals – many black men that you see, they have
> > natural hair; it’s really the women who 
> struggle with the idea of
> > processing their hair, because we’re taught that we have to have this
> > long hair, we have to have this straight, flowing hair. Natural means
> > you have chosen not to chemically process your hair. And black hair 
> in
> > its natural state is not straight.”
> >
> > Despite her attempts to “celebrate rather than condemn” with her
> > documentary, Farris-Lewis clearly sees the film and the issues it
> > raises as a struggle. “How many black actresses and black singers and
> > successful black businesspeople do we see out there these days with
> > natural hair?” she asks rhetorically, adding: “Ninety-nine percent of
> > my friends have permed hair, so I’m in no way preaching!”
> >
> > Farris-Lewis is working on a number of future projects, and says she’d
> > like to hear specifically from women in Africa 
> about their “hair
> > struggles and how they feel about natural hair, and the pressure
> > they’re under to conform to Western standards of beauty.”
> > ----------------------------------------------------
> > Email her at [log in to unmask]
> > Part of the film can be viewed at www.MySpace.com/New_growth
> >
> > <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
> > Aggo Akyea
> > http://akyea.tribalpages.com/
> > http://www.attamills2008.com/
> >
> > "Instead of studying how to make it worth men's while to buy my
> > baskets,
> > I studied rather how to avoid the necessity of selling them."
> > WALDEN by Henry David Thoreau – 1854
> >
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> >
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