Dakar Fashion Week returns to baobab forest to promote 'inclusive' fashion
DAKAR : At the foot of a towering baobab tree outside
Senegal's capital Dakar on Saturday, cameras flashed in the waning dusklight as
20-year old Najeebah Samuel strode down the catwalk to zealous applause.
Born with cerebral palsy, Samuel, 20, was the first of two
dozen models of all shapes and sizes to take the runway at Dakar's 19th annual
Fashion Week event, held at the weekend with the dual themes of inclusiveness
and sustainability.
"I want to prove to other disabled kids that you're not
your disability - you're just you," Samuel said, wearing an orange and
blue dress by Fashion Week founder Adama Ndiaye. "You have to come out and
show people who you are."
Featuring designers from across Africa, the Dakar Fashion
Week is one of the continent's longest-running fashion exhibitions.
Forced outdoors to abide by COVID-19 restrictions last year,
the organisers of this edition chose to return to the baobab forest to remind
attendees of the fashion world's responsibility to operate in a sustainable
way.
Textile production generates 1.2 billion tonnes of carbon
emissions annually, and if current rates continue, the industry could account
for more than a quarter of global emissions by 2050, according to a 2015 study
from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.
Known by her brand name Adama Paris, Ndiaye, who also
created the first Black Fashion Week show in the French capital, routinely
attaches progressive themes to Senegal's marquee fashion event.
She sets high minimum quotas for female designers and once
banned models using skin depigmentation cream to promote self-acceptance. She
chose inclusiveness as one of this year's themes to contrast the often rigid
beauty standards of Western fashion.
"I don't want to live with fashion as the European
diktat tells us to," Ndiaye said. "I want women who represent so many
different things, more than just bodies."
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