How many AA women you know are MBL or WL

gissellr78

New Member
And let's be honest, their menu isn't all that healthy. Rice and beans with meat is the diet for most of the Caribbean and many islands don't have wonderful long hair like they do. They have found hair practices that work... like limiting grease and gel on the hair because they say it "makes you look dirty" and have good

tics


lol I agree DR women are anti oil! if is greasy is dirty! I don't wear my hair out after my 2nd day of wash...is greasy and looses movement
 

beana

Well-Known Member
My mom's hair is always between BSL and MBL unless she cuts it. she's AA with type 4 hair.

Slightly OT:I never thought that long hair was out of my reach at all. My little sis had MBL hair as a child and my hair was BSL as a natural until i got a relaxer.

My niece's paternal grandmother has BSL hair and its been that way as long as ive known her.

My cousins on my dad's side all have BSL/MBL/WSL but they have a lot of mixing going on, i guess they're technically AA though. They all have 3b/c hair.

Outside of my family... in HS, there were quite a few girls with "long" hair meaning BSL or beyond, they were all AA from what i could tell. As an adult, i bump into these same people and their hair is SL now but still pretty:look:

I guess ive always been around women with long hair...
 

MRJ1972

New Member
Just a handful....And with one particular lady, she cuts her hair and it grows right back and she doesnt even take care of it!!!!

I read once that AA hair is not meant to be combed, brushed, etc and that it grows best when left alone (ex: locs)....I have seen tons of AA women and men with MBL and WL locs so this may be true? :look:
 
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laurend

Well-Known Member
QUOTE=gissellr78;9000220]Most of the women in DR don't have weaves...now with things more americanized in latin america a lot of women do wear it...From experience women in DR and in latin america in general are very into hair and beauty...Some of my family members refused to go without make up to the street back home...but as we began to migrate to the us we acquired the relaxed style with hair and everything else....

One thing i know is that our diet is not the best but most latin american women start gaining weight once they come to the us because their is no structure we eat at all times of the day here!

We may be poor back home but we find money to do our hair!:lachen:[/QUOTE]

Most women in the DR don't wear weaves and don't need it. DR is like a second home to me. When I go, I'm usually stay in Santo Domingo.
 
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princessnad

New Member
Ionno. Maybe it is only popular in Santa Domingo, but when I was in school there, the teachers told me a lot of women wore weaves. I didn't believe them because most of the woman looked like they had FABULOUS heads of hair. I mean FAB. Then I would visit the salons and people would be getting tracks... especially in the smaller, less high end hair shops.

Not denying that most people had fab heads of real hair, but when I realized a good chunk had weaves, it was shocking.
 

laurend

Well-Known Member
The majority don't need weaves. Anyway, how do you explain the very long hair of the little girls.
 

laurend

Well-Known Member


Typical Dominican girls
 

CurlyMoo

Well-Known Member
I remember this article and wanted to add it here to shed some light:

http://www.miamiherald.com/multimedia/news/afrolatin/part2/index.html

Black denial

Nearly all Dominican women straighten their hair, which experts say is a direct result of a historical learned rejection of all things black

SANTO DOMINGO -- Yara Matos sat still while long, shiny locks from China were fastened, bit by bit, to her coarse hair.

Not that Matos has anything against her natural curls, even though Dominicans call that pelo malo -- bad hair.

But a professional Dominican woman just should not have bad hair, she said. "If you're working in a bank, you don't want some barrio-looking hair. Straight hair looks elegant," the bank teller said. "It's not that as a person of color I want to look white. I want to look pretty."

And to many in the Dominican Republic, to look pretty is to look less black.
Dominican hairdressers are internationally known for the best hair-straightening techniques. Store shelves are lined with rows of skin whiteners, hair relaxers and extensions.

Racial identification here is thorny and complex, defined not so much by skin color but by the texture of your hair, the width of your nose and even the depth of your pocket. The richer, the "whiter." And, experts say, it is fueled by a rejection of anything black.

"I always associated black with ugly. I was too dark and didn't have nice hair," said Catherine de la Rosa, a dark-skinned Dominican-American college student spending a semester here. "With time passing, I see I'm not black. I'm Latina.

"At home in New York everyone speaks of color of skin. Here, it's not about skin color. It's culture."

The only country in the Americas to be freed from black colonial rule -- neighboring Haiti -- the Dominican Republic still shows signs of racial wounds more than 200 years later. Presidents historically encouraged Dominicans to embrace Spanish Catholic roots rather than African ancestry.

Here, as in much of Latin America -- the "one drop rule'' works in reverse: One drop of white blood allows even very dark-skinned people to be considered white.

LACK OF INTEREST

As black intellectuals here try to muster a movement to embrace the nation's African roots, they acknowledge that it has been a mostly fruitless cause. Black pride organizations such as Black Woman's Identity fizzled for lack of widespread interest. There was outcry in the media when the Brotherhood of the Congos of the Holy Spirit -- a community with roots in Africa -- was declared an oral patrimony of humanity by UNESCO. "There are many times that I think of just leaving this country because it's too hard," said Juan Rodríguez Acosta, curator of the Museum of the Dominican Man. Acosta, who is black, has pushed for the museum to include controversial exhibits that reflect many Dominicans' African background. "But then I think: Well if I don't stay here to change things, how will things ever change?"

A walk down city streets shows a country where blacks and dark-skinned people vastly outnumber whites, and most estimates say that 90 percent of Dominicans are black or of mixed race. Yet census figures say only 11 percent of the country's nine million people are black.

To many Dominicans, to be black is to be Haitian. So dark-skinned Dominicans tend to describe themselves as any of the dozen or so racial categories that date back hundreds of years -- Indian, burned Indian, dirty Indian, washed Indian, dark Indian, cinnamon, moreno or mulatto, but rarely negro.

The Dominican Republic is not the only nation with so many words to describe skin color. Asked in a 1976 census survey to describe their own complexions, Brazilians came up with 136 different terms, including café au lait, sunburned, morena, Malaysian woman, singed and "toasted."

"The Cuban black was told he was black. The Dominican black was told he was Indian," said Dominican historian Celsa Albert, who is black. "I am not Indian. That color does not exist. People used to tell me, ‘You are not black.' If I am not black, then I guess there are no blacks anywhere, because I have curly hair and dark skin."
 

CurlyMoo

Well-Known Member
THE HISTORY

Using the word Indian to describe dark-skinned people is an attempt to distance Dominicans from any African roots, Albert and other experts said. She noted that it's not even historically accurate: The country's Taino Indians were virtually annihilated in the 1500s, shortly after Spanish colonizers arrived.

Researchers say the de-emphasizing of race in the Dominican Republic dates to the 1700s, when the sugar plantation economy collapsed and many slaves were freed and rose up in society.

Later came the rocky history with Haiti, which shares the island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic. Haiti's slaves revolted against the French and in 1804 established their own nation. In 1822, Haitians took over the entire island, ruling the predominantly Hispanic Dominican Republic for 22 years.

To this day, the Dominican Republic celebrates its independence not from centuries-long colonizer Spain, but from Haiti.

"The problem is Haitians developed a policy of black-centrism and . . . Dominicans don't respond to that," said scholar Manuel Núñez, who is black. "Dominican is not a color of skin, like the Haitian."

Dictator Rafael Trujillo, who ruled from 1930 to 1961, strongly promoted anti-Haitian sentiments, and is blamed for creating the many racial categories that avoided the use of the word "black."

The practice continued under President Joaquín Balaguer, who often complained that Haitians were "darkening'' the country. In the 1990s, he was blamed for thwarting the presidential aspirations of leading black candidate José Francisco Peña Gómez by spreading rumors that he was actually Haitian.

"Under Trujillo, being black was the worst thing you could be," said Afro-Dominican poet Blas Jiménez. "Now we are Dominican, because we are not Haitian. We are something, because we are not that."

Jiménez remembers when he got his first passport, the clerk labeled him "Indian." He protested to the director of the agency.
"I remember the man saying, ‘If he wants to be black, let him be black!' '' Jiménez said.

Resentment toward anything Haitian continues, as an estimated one million Haitians live in the Dominican Republic, most working in the sugar and construction industries. Mass deportations often mistakenly include black Dominicans, and Haitians have been periodically lynched in mob violence. The government has been trying to deny citizenship and public education to the Dominican-born children of illegal Haitian migrants.

When migrant-rights activist Sonia Pierre won the prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award in 2006, the government responded by trying to revoke her citizenship, saying she is actually Haitian.

"There's tremendous resistance to blackness -- black is something bad," said black feminist Sergia Galván. ‘‘Black is associated with dark, illegal, ugly, clandestine things. There is a prototype of beauty here and a lot of social pressure. There are schools where braids and natural hair are prohibited."

Galván and a loosely knit group of women have protested European canons of beauty, once going so far as to rally outside a beauty pageant. She and other experts say it is now more common to see darker-skinned women in the contests -- but they never win.

CULTURE PULL

Several women said the cultural rejection of African looking hair is so strong that people often shout insults at women with natural curls.
"I cannot take the bus because people pull my hair and stick combs in it," said wavy haired performance artist Xiomara Fortuna. "They ask me if I just got out of prison. People just don't want that image to be seen."

The hours spent on hair extensions and painful chemical straightening treatments are actually an expression of nationalism, said Ginetta Candelario, who studies the complexities of Dominican race and beauty at Smith College in Massachusetts. And to some of the women who relax their hair, it's simply a way to have soft manageable hair in the Dominican Republic's stifling humidity.

"It's not self-hate," Candelario said. "Going through that is to love yourself a lot. That's someone saying, ‘I am going to take care of me.' It's nationalist, it's affirmative and celebrating self."

Money, education, class -- and of course straight hair -- can make dark-skinned Dominicans be perceived as more "white," she said. Many black Dominicans here say they never knew they were black -- until they visited the United States.

"During the Trujillo regime, people who were dark skinned were rejected, so they created their own mechanism to fight it," said Ramona Hernández, Director of the Dominican Studies Institute at City College in New York.

"When you ask, ‘What are you?' they don't give you the answer you want . . . saying we don't want to deal with our blackness is simply what you want to hear."

Hernández, who has olive-toned skin and a long mane of hair she blows out straight, acknowledges she would "never, never, never'' go to a university meeting with her natural curls.

"That's a woman trying to look cute; I'm a sociologist," she said.
Asked if a black Dominican woman can be considered beautiful in her country, Hernández leapt to her feet.

"You should see how they come in here with their big asses!'' she said, shuffling across her office with her arms extended behind her back, simulating an enormous rear-end. "They come in here thinking they are all that, and I think, 'doesn't she know she's not really pretty?' "

Maria Elena Polanca is a black woman with the striking good looks. She said most Dominicans look at her with curiosity, as if a black woman being beautiful were something strange.

She spends her days promoting a hair straightener at La Sirena, a Santo Domingo department store that features an astonishing array of hair straightening products.

"Look, we have bad hair, bad. Nobody says 'curly.' It's bad," she said. "You can't go out like that. People will say, 'Look at that nest! Someone light a match!' ''

'IT WAS HURTFUL'

Purdue University professor Dawn Stinchcomb, who is African American, said that when she came here in 1999 to study African influences in literature, people insulted her in the street.

Waiters refused to serve her. People wouldn't help Stinchcomb with her research, saying if she wanted to study Africans, she'd have to go to Haiti.

"I had people on the streets . . . yell at me to get out of the sun because I was already black enough," she said. "It was hurtful. . . . I was raised in the South and thought I could handle any racial comment. I never before experienced anything like I did in the Dominican Republic.

"I don't have a problem when people who don't look like me say hurtful things. But when it's people who look just like me?"

Click Link for photos
 
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laurend

Well-Known Member
Don't get my wrong, they have serious head issues. They think I'm odd when I visit because I wear my hair natural. However, my point is on the whole they definitely have longer hair than we do. If some have weaves so be it, but the majority don't need it. I wish I can post pics when I was there in the early 90's before the weave craze came along. People had long hair.
 

CurlyMoo

Well-Known Member
About kids, I'll say this. There are plenty of AA kids w/ long unstretched hair...given that it's unstretched, how long is a mystery to me. I suspect that most DRs have a different type of hair, so it's length is more apparent. However, many AA kids get their hair chemically straightened at very young ages, say under teens....and those who haven't get pressured into it when they reach their teen years, so even if they started out w/ some length, it had a tendency to be nearly gone by their late teens and early 20s. DR girls probably don't have these pressures towards early relaxing.

There is pressure, please read article posted.
 

CurlyMoo

Well-Known Member
Don't get my wrong, they have serious head issues. They think I'm odd when I visit because I wear my hair natural. However, my point is on the whole they definitely have longer hair than we do. If some have weaves so be it, but the majority don't need it. I wish I can post pics when I was there in the early 90's before the weave craze came along. People had long hair.

I need to visit just to stare at hair. :lachen:
 

laurend

Well-Known Member
Little girls are braided up for a long period of time there. AA girls are getting the relaxers and press early. It was until her teenaged years my sponsor child got a blow dry.
 

laurend

Well-Known Member
Take a trip there for a day and you don't even have to leave the airport. You would see an eyeful. Seeing is believing.
 

princessnad

New Member
To be fair, some shorter hair little girls


Their hair there is generally banging, whether it is naturally type 1, 2, 3 or 4. I was just shocked when I EXPERIENCED WITH MY OWN EYES SEVERAL TIMES AT THE SALON seeing women who I thought had real hair getting extensions.

Maybe the little girls' long hair got heat damaged after wearing it straight for a while? Or maybe the ones who got extensions were the unlucky ones whose hair was difficult to grow in a society that prizes long hair. I don't know the reasons, just sharing my experience.

Here are my personal pictures. Some people had banging hair, some didn't







Chick on the right vs chick on the left below


and the males
 
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laurend

Well-Known Member
I'm not saying they don't weave up at all. I agree all don't have long hair. What I'm saying as a group of women their hair is longer than AA women.
 

laurend

Well-Known Member
Hopefully some of our Dominican members can comment on this thread because it's their culture.
 

BostonMaria

Well-Known Member
Oh good Lord I'm scared to even post in here!

Dominican here, please don't throw any rocks LOL

I would say that the majority of little Dominican girls have long hair, regardless of texture. It is the norm to have a little girl in buns/braids up until they get their first relaxer. Its normal to see black Latinas with long hair. I'm not say we ALL have long hair, I'm saying that its not abnormal to see a woman with 4B hair down her back.

As far as Dominicans having issues, talking about color and stuff like that I'm not going to get into it. But as far as hair, long is normal. Nobody is shocked in my family that my hair is MBL. My daughters all have long hair. My stepdaughters have long hair. They're not allowed to cut it until they're older.

Oh and down in DR they do wear extensions and braids. Since those are so costly not everybody gets them. The people that can pay the $$$ will get them. People are not relaxing as much as they used to, but rollersets and Dominican blowouts are more common than seeing wash n' go's.

Celestial you said....
I agree with this and their texture tend to be softer and a bit looser than AA.

It might be true for some, but not all. I have people in my family that are 100% Dominican and have 4B and CNaps. I have people in my family with straight hair. Its common to see a variety of hair types down there. After all we do have African blood in us.
 

Desarae

Well-Known Member
No. I think only a handful can actually reach MBL or WL maybe less than 1% of the african american population. I think if african american women took care of their hair, the average length might measure SL with the second largest percentage at BSL and the smallest percentage at MBL. I really don't see any african american women with WL hair. They probably would only measure in the 10s or the few 100s. But this is just my theory.

Huh? You must not visit this forum too often.

10's or few 100's where? The whole US??

:lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen:
 
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