Skin bleaching is not only common among African women but also among Asian women like the Indians and the Chinese. In these places, the fairer the skin, the more beautiful a woman is.
And in the case of African women, it’s normal for women to hear things like, “you’re beautiful for a black lady”. Making it look like black and beauty do not go together and that it is an exceptional case to see a woman who is dark skinned and beautiful.
And to be seen as beautiful, a lot of women use skin bleaching products such as creams, pills, and surgical method to erase their dark skin and look whiter.
To celebrate dark skin, new social media campaign with the hashtag – #unfairandlovely has gone global and receiving a lot of attention. It’s purpose is to challenge the popular view that fair skin is the most attractive.
ALSO SEE: “Ain’t Nothing Cute About Being Dark” Bleached Girl’s Facebook Post Goes Viral.
See below, an excerpt of how the BBC is reporting it.
As part of the bleaching culture, new creams have been introduced to lighten armpit hair and even female genitals in the last few years.
Over the years, campaigners have tried to challenge this belief – they argue that beauty is more than skin deep and that dark is beautiful too.
In recent weeks, three students from the University of Texas, Austin, have launched a new campaign which has become a talking point on social media around the world.
It was inspired by a project that Pax Jones, a 21-year-old black student at the University of Texas in Austin, began in December.
She created a photo series featuring stunning images of her South Asian classmates, sisters Mirusha and Yanusha Yogarajah.
“Our goal was to combat colourism and the under-representation of people of colour in the media. We were trying to challenge the way colourism permeates our lives,” Ms Jones told the BBC over the phone from Austin.
The series, called “Unfair & Lovely”, became a hit and inspired the hashtag #unfairandlovely – named after the hugely popular Indian skin-lightening cream Fair and Lovely.
The campaign, which asked dark-skinned people to put their photos on social media, generated lively discussions on Twitter and Facebook and saw nearly 1,000 people posting their photos on Instagram.
Mirusha Yogarajah told the BBC she readily agreed to be a part of the campaign because colourism is rampant within the South Asian community.
“Most of us are advised not to go out in the sun because we’ll get darker. It’s as if darkness is undesirable.
“In college, I was abused by a South Asian person who had lighter skin. And someone once threw a bleach balloon at me.”
Such incidents, Ms Yogarajah says, are deeply humiliating.
“At the time they happened, it was really hard for me to see myself as valuable. It is difficult to understand why people will dehumanise you for the way you look. I felt very vulnerable,” she says.
Ms Jones, who says she has been ridiculed for her “hair texture” and “wide nose”, agreed.
“We wanted to start a conversation and I think we have succeeded in that”.