About 40 black models, most of them
women, staged a topless protest in Rio de Janeiro against the low
presence of Afro-Brazilians on fashion catwalks.
“What strikes
you, your racism or me?” one of the female demonstrators wrote on her
chest during the protest late Wednesday timed to coincide with Rio
Fashion Week.
The demonstration also coincided with the signing
of a deal between the Fashion Week organizers and the Rio ombudsman’s
office setting a 10 percent quota for black models in fashion shows, the
G1 news website reported.
“This agreement crowns a joint
initiative that can open a space that does not yet exist,” said Moises
Alcuna, a spokesman for Educafro, a civil rights group championing the
labor and educational rights of blacks and indigenous people.
More
than half of Brazil’s 200 million people are of African descent, the
world’s second largest black population after that of Nigeria.
But Afro-Brazilians complain of widespread racial inequality.
“If
we are buying clothes, why can’t we parade in the (fashion) shows,”
asked a 15-year-old model taking part in the protest. “Does that mean
that only white women can sell and the rest of us can only buy?”
“Claiming
to showcase Brazilian fashion without the real Brazilians amounts to
showing Brazilian fashion (only) with white models,” said Jose Flores, a
25-year-old former model who now works in advertising.
After 13
years of debate, President Dilma Rousseff last year signed a
controversial law that reserves half of seats in federal universities to
public school students, with priority given to Afro-Brazilians and
indigenous people.
In June 2009, the Sao Paulo Fashion Week
(SPFW)– Latin America’s premier fashion event — for the first time
imposed quotas requiring at least 10 percent of the models to be black
or indigenous.
Previously, only a handful of black models
featured among the 350 or so that sashayed down the catwalk — usually
less than three percent.
But in 2010, the 10 percent quota was removed, after a conservative prosecutor deemed it unconstitutional.
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Saturday, 28 February 2015
Black Models In Brazil Go Topless To Protest Racism in Fashion Industry (PHOTO)
Publisher GhanaThings.Com
2/28/2015 06:53:00 pm
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