Whites, mowhawks, dreads appropriation....
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A Few Good Reasons Why White People Should Not Wear “Mohawks” or Dreadlocks:
“Mohawk” is the name of a sovereign First Nation in the Iroquois Confederacy. Wearing “Mohawks” erases Mohawk people and culture.
Dreadlocks are a symbol of Black/African pride and resistance to white supremacist beauty standards and are rooted in Black/African struggles for survival and liberation. Dreadlocks are rooted in Rastafarianism, a pan-African spiritual/religious movement for healing and decolonization for African and African people worldwide. Rastafarianism is a form of resistance to a history of white supremacy, colonization and genocide.
The traditions of people of color/non-white people are still under attack across the planet. Appropriating our traditions and ways of dressing/presenting is a further attack on our communities. Wearing “Mohawks” or dreadlocks plays into a racist society that believes people of color and our lands, bodies, cultures and spirit are up for grabs. “Mohawks” were popularizes in Britain and North America because of the film “The Taxi Driver. ”Appropriating other cultures means you neglect looking at your own ethnic roots and traditions. By wearing “Mohawks” and dreadlocks, white people demonstrate they are unaware of anti-racist struggles and deteriorate trust between white people and people of color/non-white people.
Being an anti-racist white person is counter-culture. Trying to present a counter-cultural image by appropriating other cultures is not. The hairstyle called “Mohawks” is rooted in distinct Iroquois and other First Nations/Native traditions that have only recently (1978) been legal in the United States. Non-native people who wear “Mohawks” appear naive and condescending to this reality.
By cutting off their “Mohawks” and dreadlocks, white people take a concrete step towards an anti-racist journey.
But I’m not trying to appropriate anything. I just appreciate other cultures. Isn’t that okay? Appreciating other cultures does not mean you need to appropriate any aspect of them. A true appreciation of other cultures means fighting against the forces trying to destroy them, not taking them as your own. It’s just a Mohawk. I don’t think of it as a native thing. And therein lies the problem.
But, I wear my hair this way as a statement against oppressive cultures and governments. How is that racist? You can take a stand against oppression and dominant cultures without appropriating the cultures of the people being hurt by them. Appropriation actually enforces oppression, it does not stand against it. Appropriation is part of the problem, not part of the solution.
This is a free country. Can’t I do whatever I want? This country has never been free for people of color/non-white people. Certainly, you can chose to wear your hair however you want. Historically, however, people of color have not been able to make that choice.
For instance, in the US and Canada, Native children were forced to cut their hair and wear it like white peoples’ in “boarding” or “residential” schools created to destroy First Nation cultures. Slavery was an act of owning humans. Enslaved people had no legal right to do anything with their bodies. Their bodies were private property. When white people wear “Mohawks” or dreadlocks it twists those hairstyles into symbols of privilege rather than symbols of survival and resistance. The struggle against racism is more than just not saying racist comments or knowing that the United States was built by slave labor. It is also a struggle to recognize and understand the ways racism/white supremacy are woven into every aspect of life.
One of the ways racism plays out which is often ignored or not seen by white people is through appropriation, “the act of taking or making use of without any authority or right.” Appropriation ignores the lives and struggles of oppressed communities, and instead takes what is seen as interesting, useful or beautiful, disregarding our culture and our lives. In the US and other countries, appropriation is part of long histories of racism and genocide. Colonial governments and peoples appropriated the homelands of First Nations/Native people.
Europeans appropriated the bodies of African peoples during slavery.
While our bodies, homelands and labor continue to be appropriated, so do our cultural symbols/lifeways. The New Age movement, for example, appropriates (and twists) the spiritual practices of First Nations, Asian, African and other cultures.
Among progressive/radical white people, the problem of appropriation continues to damage communities of color. Mohawks and dreadlocks worn by non-Native/non-African people is one form of appropriation that often goes unnoticed and unchallenged and is often misunderstood.
Healing the legacy and current reality of racism and colonization means looking closely at the ways we perpetuate these forms of violence. It means, in part, letting go of cultural symbols that have been appropriated from people of color/non-white people and instead looking deeply at he complex issues that surround race and racism.
CUT OFF YOUR DREADLOCK AND “MOHAWKS” AND HELP CONTINUE REVOLUTION AGAINST COLONIZATION AND RACISM! HELP YOUR WHITE FRIENDS TO DO THE SAME!
(From an article, the LINK will not let me post this topic w/o approval. So I copied n pasted it all.)
What are your thoughts?
Comments
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Anything telling someone else what "NOT" to do is ? .
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ThaChozenWun wrote: »Anything telling someone else what "NOT" to do is ? .
So you don't tell your child not to do things? -
I personally don't want to see white people in dreads or cornrows, not because of some perceived slight or offense. I think the ? looks ridiculous.
Unless it's Bo Derek. -
So you don't tell your child not to do things?
Nope, do what you want and learn from your mistakes.
I can only suggest to him that some ways are better than others. -
Princess Jihad wrote: »Palestinian scarves should be mentioned in the article as well. If white people don't support Palestine, don't wear it, thinking you are making a fashion statement.
Yeah, whenever I get the chance I ask them "do you support the liberation of Palestine?"
I get looks like, whaaat's a Palestine? -
Princess Jihad wrote: »Palestinian scarves should be mentioned in the article as well. If white people don't support Palestine, don't wear it, thinking you are making a fashion statement.
Palestinians are white. -
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ThaChozenWun wrote: »Nope, do what you want and learn from your mistakes.
I can only suggest to him that some ways are better than others.
I call ? . Some mistakes could be life ending. I sure if your child was walking out in the middle of the street into oncoming traffic, you won't say do what you want. I want my child to learn from other's mistakes. -
I call ? . Some mistakes could be life ending. I sure if your child was walking out in the middle of the street into oncoming traffic, you won't say do what you want. I want my child to learn from other's mistakes.
No, not ? .
Saying, if you dont look both way before you cross the street you'll end up dead is different from saying stay off the street. -
ThaChozenWun wrote: »No, not ? .
Saying, if you dont look both way before you cross the street you'll end up dead is different from saying stay off the street.
Were talking a young child. And I call ? , again. -
Princess Jihad wrote: »Palestinian scarves should be mentioned in the article as well. If white people don't support Palestine, don't wear it, thinking you are making a fashion statement.