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Jul 18
2008

on hair extensions and why you should reconsider that weave

Posted by Amina in Untagged 

Amina

 
I have never been a fan of weaves, but I have on the occassion won a wig, or braided my hair with "fake hair"-- what we call in Kenya piece (is this the right spelling?). A few years ago, I decided to let my hair out "natural", so I stopped using chemicals.

Perhaps we all

know that human hair (which women use for weaves, wigs and braids) is from real human hair (duh). But have you thought about where that hair comes from? Maybe from a dead person? Or a poor child somewhere in rural India or Russia?

 

Jamalia weave
Jamelia, the British songstress, recently went on a field trip where she found out some disturbing truths.

How did I know I wasn't wearing a dead person's hair? And if I was, had they agreed to that before they passed away, or had they simply had it shaved off in a mortuary without their family's knowledge?And if the hair wasn't taken from the dead, who were this army of women and girls from whom it was taken? I realised for the first time that there might be a very real human cost to the beauty fad which allowed me to feel more confident on stage.

Her investigation took her to Russia where she found a 13 year old girl selling her hair for a pittance.

And a trip to India where diseased people, to get blessings, and to relieve themselves of a curse, shave off their hair and trash it. This hair is later picked up and sold as human hair.

This is a religious sacrifice: the shaving represents a last-ditch plea to a higher power to save their home from being repossessed.

Jamalia no weave
Jamelia speaks not so much about the "fake" hair and a lot of women's need for long hair, but against the hundreds of girls, and young women who lose their hair only to make a few bucks so others might spend hundreds of dollars just to look good.

Now, to me, a packet of hair extensions has a face - whether that is a Russian teenager, a woman in India who is shaving her head as a sacrifice or a two-year-old girl in tears because she doesn't understand what's happening to her.

Sweatshop anyone? Do you know where the hair you wear comes from?

 

 


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written by Enigmaress , July 18, 2008
WHAT!!! Diseased??? Dead? Oooooh Lord!! Thats too morbid and absolutely creepy of a thought- so that would also include the piece used to micro- braid (piece) too? I wouldnt even know what to say about this particular topic.

Frankly- most beauty products, or should I say- what most women use for 'Beautification' come from some very interesting places. For instance, being told that some cosmetics are made from cow hooves, or pig bladder. The pig bladder one is allegedly added to lipstick to stop it from drying up and turning to rock or something rather... yikes.

I am still digesting the whole diseased hair idea- my goodness!!
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written by msazi , July 18, 2008
Haiya! I did not really want to say much but KI insited that my one word comment was too short. Still here it goes. Haiya!
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written by acolyte , July 19, 2008
I have always detested weaves, the human hair ones esp so I was very willing to share the original article in the Daily Mail when I came across it. I am going to write my own take on it, how someone can walk around with someone else's hair on their head, that is just plain disgusting either go natural or go synthetic.
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why human hair is ideal
written by Amina , July 19, 2008
I have never had human hair on my head... lakini to play devil's advocate, women who like it do because it lasts longer, looks more real, and is easier to manage. And like Jamelia says its quite expensive!

@Enigmaress -> Yes, the piece that is human hair for braids! Isn't that something! I love the information age, coz we'all can make informed decisions. So no more human hair!
@Msazi-> you can say haiya again
@Aco -> I cannot wait to see your post!
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I am totally shocked
written by jaya wardene , July 21, 2008
Like the title says I am gobsmacked! so, when they say it is human hair they mean real human hair. I would never have guessed.

I recall now my favourite barber-shop in Nairobi, right opposite the Fire-station, near where the Mats for Limuru and Bano waited. A guy used to come in at about mid-day and sweep up all the trimmings that lay on the floor. He'd stuff them in brown gunny-sacks and take them away. I once asked a barber who was doing my hair what they used cut hair for and without blinking he told me that it was used in drug-manufacture...sometimes I wonder..
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you're not serious
written by John Ongeri , July 21, 2008
I want to take the matter seriously but it is very difficult. How many of you are reminded of the old Kiswahili saying that: Akili ni nywele, kila mtu anazake.

I saw a post recently about grobber the liquid in a little dark bottle
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written by sweetness , July 24, 2008
Oh Please! Spare me the drama of poor girls selling their hair! Its straight from the book Little Women when Jo cuts off her hair ("her one beauty" as described by her sister Amy) so that they can get money to send their mother to visit their sick father in the war... I wear my weaves with no hesitation at all!!!! This is simply another agenda by African men to scare us off wearing fake hair lakini hakuna! Kaa ngumu my black sisters and wear those damn weaves if you so please!
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