4 Black Muslim Ladies on Vogue, Religion, and Taking Up House

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Beauty blogger Nafisa Omar

Traditionally, the style and sweetness industries have had a fame for under-representing the folks and tradition they revenue from. Nonetheless, it does not negate that many individuals flip to model for expression and different causes—Black Muslim girls included. Typically, folks love to talk for girls of shade relatively than permitting them to talk for themselves. To additional discover the nuances between style and tradition, I spoke to Black Muslim girls about what model means to them, the unfairness and requirements they face, and the way they’re hovering past expectations to take up area. Learn their tales forward.

Sagal Muse

sagal muse, fashion and beauty content creator
SAGAL MUSE

Sagal Muse is a content material creator, illustrator, and advertising and marketing skilled primarily based in Toronto. She presently works as a content material supervisor and is the founding father of Muse Avenue journal. Her pursuits embrace DEI, digital illustration, tech, and creating style and life-style content material. 

“Rising up, I relied on magazines and blogs to seek out style inspiration. I loved flipping by the pages and seeing all the newest collections designed by Chanel, Lanvin, Balmain, and extra. Nonetheless, as soon as Instagram grew to become standard, I spotted I used to be basing my style sense on lookbooks and kinds that weren’t meant for me. I may by no means have a look at style spreads with out excited about how I’d alter stylish appears to be like to suit my modest model.

I hardly ever engaged with style or life-style content material as a result of the ladies who graced the covers of magazines by no means represented me the best way a Muslim or Black lady may. In a manner, my relationship with style began as a recreation of creativeness—the place I had to make use of my creativity frequently to make Y2K kinds work for me. Fortunately, with the rise of social media and influencers, we see extra illustration of Black and Muslim girls in style.

Black Muslim girls are greater than fashions: We’re entrepreneurs, stylists, consultants, accountants, HR professionals, and extra.

 

My relationship with style has turn into extra about self-expression. Now after I see new modest kinds, in most cases made stylish by Black Muslim girls, I’ve the chance to check out the identical appears to be like with out feeling like I must compromise my model or religion. Due to this new wave of illustration, style feels quite a bit much less unique and extra accessible.

Black Muslim girls are on the intersection of three lovely, but marginalized identities—being Black, Muslim, and feminine. Talking from my very own experiences, we typically really feel the burden of all three. Generally in separate cases, and different occasions suddenly. The usual while you’re considered as less-than-equal in society is to work twice as exhausting to show your self to be in any other case. For Black Muslim girls, it’s not solely ingrained in us to work thrice as exhausting but it surely’s anticipated of us by society.

On the identical hand, Black Muslim girls bear the burden of tokenization within the style trade, whereas manufacturers get celebrated for his or her fast efforts. On social media, it seems like unpaid model partnerships with corporations are simply an intention to succeed in an untapped market. In media, we see campaigns that make the most of Black Muslim girls to showcase variety, whereas we hear tales of fashions being mistreated. It is clear that Black Muslim girls convey manufacturers worth, and whereas the surge in illustration is way wanted, in lots of circumstances it might simply be a facade. For example, some manufacturers forged Black Muslim girls as fashions, and but help (or keep silent on) subjects that instantly have an effect on this group of ladies—particularly, the banning and criminalization of Muslim girls carrying hijab, whereas celebrities and fashions are praised for appropriating related kinds.

Celebrating Black Muslim girls means offering us with equitable alternatives, secure and inclusive areas, correct illustration in media, and equal pay for work. It is not sufficient to convey Black Muslim girls on board for a style marketing campaign with out guaranteeing that this group is appropriately represented. I do know that many Black Muslim girls in my life would relatively not be represented than misrepresented in mainstream media. Up to now, it is essential to notice that Black Muslim girls are greater than fashions: we’re entrepreneurs, stylists, consultants, accountants, HR professionals, and extra. Making certain we’re represented the proper manner on and off digicam and offering equitable sources is essential.”

Umi Mohammed

Umi Mohammed
UMI MOHAMMED

Umi Mohammed is a non-profit fairness chief and the co-founder of Challenge UP (Unleash Potential) a grassroots group that creates secure areas for younger Black Muslim women and girls. She can be the co-host of The Storied Thoughts Podcast, the place she amplifies BIPOC voices.

“To me, style is a car for artistic expression, id, and the way we join with others. Vogue is a type of self-expression that permits you whole management over what you showcase and the way you wish to present up on the planet. My grandmother sparked my curiosity in style, and she or he is why I am keen on patterns, prints, and colours. I consider we should always put on issues that convey us pleasure.

The fetishization of Black girls, particularly in style, isn’t a brand new subject. Nonetheless, Black Muslim girls have the added layer of Islamophobia, which suggests the intersections of our id makes us much more susceptible to being fetishized. The historic and current hypersexualization of Black feminine our bodies, and the attract of dressing modestly and carrying the hijab, attracts undesirable consideration to us. Though fetishization might typically be seen as flattering in nature, it’s truly dangerous as a result of it continues to serve problematic notions of various teams of individuals. The requirements set within the magnificence and style industries favor White, Eurocentric options and beliefs.

“Though the sweetness and style trade touts that they are shifting in the direction of extra inclusion, I feel there’s nonetheless work to be finished. I consider inclusion and illustration are authentically admiring, celebrating, and capturing all girls’s magnificence no matter race, sexual orientation, faith, ethnicity, or capability. I hope to witness a world the place girls can exist with out objectification and dehumanization to suit an unrealistic normal of magnificence.”

Nafisa Omar

Nafisa Omar, a beauty and style creator based in Seattle.
NAFISA OMAR

Nafisa Omar is a 22-year-old Somali-American content material creator primarily based in Seattle.

“Over the previous few years, an enormous motion has pushed for inclusivity and variety. Whereas that motion has impressed many firsts for a lot of Black Muslim girls, it did not remove performative admiration and help. Having one token Black Muslim hijabi in campaigns and social media has turn into a typical field for manufacturers to verify and present inclusivity—which should not be the case. That fetishization is probably dangerous, and except it is genuine and significant, it hinders development. Illustration has turn into a device that corporations typically use as a handy substitute as a substitute of precise substantiative change, which is the place it actually counts.”

Zaynab Yusuf

zaynab yusuf, style and beauty blogger.
ZAYNAB YUSUF

Zaynab Yusuf is a style and life-style blogger who shares content material to assist create area for Black Muslim girls. She needs her platform to encourage girls and to vary the narrative surrounding modesty.

“I discover style very empowering as a result of it permits me to indicate up authentically and unapologetically. It additionally encourages me to work in the direction of making areas for those that appear to be me. Whereas we focus on Black Muslim girls’s challenges in style (and past), we should acknowledge that every one Black Muslim girls don’t expertise the identical challenges. For instance, plus-size Black Muslim or darker-skinned girls might have a totally completely different expertise than I do. Finally, it is essential to spotlight how deeply nuanced these challenges will be.

We’re not ready for the world to just accept us.

 

I’ve been slowly getting my foot within the door as a mannequin within the modest style trade as a result of it is the place I felt I’d be accepted. Most modestly dressed fashions throughout the trade are lighter-skinned Muslim girls with Eurocentric options. When Black Muslim girls are included, they’re typically subjected to tokenism. The identical piece of clothes that’s thought of “modest” on a skinny White Muslim lady could also be perceived as inappropriate or promiscuous on a curvy Black Muslim lady.

After working within the modest style trade, I’ve realized how essential illustration is—particularly for younger Black Muslim women. There aren’t many areas for Black girls—not to mention Black Muslim girls—the place they’re represented in the best way we deserve. Nonetheless, I feel many people have gotten to a spot the place we’re not ready for the world to just accept us. As a substitute, we’re studying to just accept ourselves and take up area on the planet.”

 

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