White woman doing 4c hair seminars

naturalmanenyc

Well-Known Member
I heard of this woman today and looked her up. She owns a salon in PA.
Her name was attached to at least one seminar for 4c hair.

http://rasasalon.com/blog/care-for-4c-hair/#more-2101

Amber Muhammad
Video http://youtu.be/6S-uFY_-Mnc


http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/...ocks-style-and-a-paradigm-shift-at-rasa-salon

This is not a beauty shop story. This is not even a hair story, really. This is a story about a paradigm shift, a radical change in the accepted way of thinking about something. I'm letting you know up front, because paradigm shifts in progress are tricky things to catch. They don't happen so much as evolve, and they often evolve at a snail's pace.

At the center of this particular evolution is Amber Muhammad, stylist and owner of Rasa Salon, which has been serving clients in Germantown since 2008. Muhammad is not necessarily the kind of person you might expect to own a salon specializing in styling locs (dreadlocks). She's white.

To Muhammad, being a loctician is not about race. For her it's much more simple. She believes that every stylist should be trained in all textures of hair, regardless of their own hair texture or race. This isn't the case with most salons which tend to cater to a specific hair texture and by extension to a specific ethnicity.

She understands why people might not be comfortable choosing a stylist with hair very different from their own. "You look at the stylists and you say 'which stylist looks just like me or which stylist looks like the way I would want to look?' Hair care is intimate. You're working on someone's head. Your hair and your head is a very intimate part of your body. A lot of [clients] are not comfortable having an intimate experience with someone that doesn't look just like them."

Muhammad points out that stylists are often equally uncomfortable working with a hair texture that's different from their own. Her goal is to get both clients and stylists to think outside of the box when it comes to hair care. "I feel like it's my responsibility as an artist and as a hairstylist to learn about the different materials and textures of hair that I'm working with. I look at it more from an artist's perspective than a cultural perspective."

Wearable art

Muhammad considers hair styling an art. Her artistic interest in hair was inspired by a childhood friend whose family came from Trinidad. Her friend often returned from visits to the island wearing her hair in elaborate braided styles. The asthetic of those styles inform Muhammad's understanding of natural hair as a vehicle for wearable art.

The most popular wearable art at Rasa is created through a palm rolling technique designed to shape and train hair into coiled locs. Traditionally, locs are associated with tightly curled hair textures and loc growth is a process that takes time to develop. Muhammad has invented a technique however, that creates mature looking locs for straight textured hair in a matter of hours.

Cultural critics

Muhammad has her critics, though. There are those who assume that because of her race she's somehow exploiting hair traditions that have their roots in African cultures. "A lot of people see me as a threat—that's the best way I can put it. They feel as though their cultural identity is being stolen or exploited in a way. So much has been taken from African-Americans in general, so much, and hair, like I said, is an intimate thing for people, and so a lot of people are saying 'oh no, not another thing taken from us.' That's not where I'm coming from at all."

Muhammad wants to educate people "on not connecting hair texture with nationality or race." She wants to fundamentally change the way we think about hair to open up a space for artistry and craft. This doesn't mean however, that she's dismissive of this country's cultural history and how its standard of beauty has worked against specific racial groups. "We are really brainwashed, and as a culture are brainwashed into a lot of self-hatred, especially African-American women."

Embracing the journey

Muhammad encourages everyone who walks into her salon to take pride in themselves and in their hair. She hopes that salons like hers, which cater to clients with all different hair textures, will become the new standard.

"We're helping people on their journey to loving themselves and loving their hair—their natural hair. It's beautiful to see that journey take place."
 
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naturalmanenyc

Well-Known Member
I had a White stylist when I was a teenager, but only because she worked for the Black salon owner who did my hair 95% of the time. I was relaxed then though.

It's interesting that a White woman is showing care and attention to 4c hair since so many salons, including natural salons, don't prefer to deal with 4c hair.
 

Gin&Tonic

Well-Known Member
She's not white white. Girlfriend got an ankh tattoo on her arm and dreads. She's more afro- centric than I am.

Highjacking someone's culture does not take the white away. I wish black folks would understand this. I had tacos last night, that doesn't make me Hispanic.
 

kupenda

Well-Known Member
Well thats interesting. If she's familiar and comfortable, I dont mind. Thanks for the article OP!
 

niknakmac

Well-Known Member
In 20 years they will be saying she created locs. I've noticed that race never matters when they are stealing another races cultural practices.
 

lushlady

Well-Known Member
In 20 years they will be saying she created locs. I've noticed that race never matters when they are stealing another races cultural practices.

More like 20 seconds. . . from the article, "Muhammad has invented a technique however, that creates mature looking locs for straight textured hair in a matter of hours." Bunch of idea stealing culture vultures.
 

ThatJerseyGirl

Well-Known Member
Highjacking someone's culture does not take the white away. I wish black folks would understand this. I had tacos last night, that doesn't make me Hispanic.

^5 Gin&Tonic -- I wish I could give you a high 5 in person. All truth spoken right here.

There is nothing a white woman can tell me about my hair. I don't care if she has locs nor not. Nothing. Nathan. Nada. Zilch.
 

Saludable84

Better Late Than Ugly
So now we have yt's to thank for locs, hip hop/rap, big booties and cornrows. Bacteria have more culture than us at this point.
 

koolkittychick

Well-Known Member
Oh Lord. Not another WW "Columbusing" some part of our culture for personal gain. Next thing you know she'll be featured in Vogue as the inventor of the hottest new hairstyle trend.:nono:
 

lux10023

Well-Known Member
this has me:lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen:

this has got to be a joke..has to be

"At the center of this particular evolution is Amber Muhammad, stylist and owner of Rasa Salon"

amber muhammed?????? rasa salon???????
:lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen::lachen:
 

bklynbornNbred

Well-Known Member
I need Maury to confirm she's actually white. Looks like someone was passing in her bloodline. Either way since she's claiming white I have no need to support her salon.

But nah she not Mayflower white at all.
 

bronzephoenix

Well-Known Member
I mean... :look: Doesn't she have anything better to do?? Like, I'm pretty sure we got this. Thanks though...

Sent from my iPhone using LHCF
 

southerncitygirl

Well-Known Member
Ummm I'll take Nah for $1000, Alex. Worse than than the white ppl who hijack our culture are the black folks who coon, STAN & make excuses for their foolery/shenanigans as to have whitey throw then crumbs and pet them on the head and tell them they were/are a good negrum..... NEXT & BYE FELICITY!!
 

greenandchic

Well-Known Member
I agree that all stylists should learn to work on all hair types. I mean, not everyone lives in a black Mecca (Atlanta, DMV, NYC) with an abundance of black stylists, and ones that really know how to work on natural black hair.

With that said, she's going too far. :lol: I would avoid her for sure.
 

intellectualuva

Well-Known Member
Where is that The Office quote someone has in their siggy...."You make black people like something, then you make white people like something, then you have to get black people to stop doing the thing....."

I feel like everytime I turn around they are on Step 2.....like we can't have NOTHING?? Geez.

I just want to know who her clients are and why? All these natural salons and you can't find a black woman to give your money to? smh. I can't.
 

Saludable84

Better Late Than Ugly
Where is that The Office quote someone has in their siggy...."You make black people like something, then you make white people like something, then you have to get black people to stop doing the thing....." I feel like everytime I turn around they are on Step 2.....like we can't have NOTHING?? Geez. I just want to know who her clients are and why? All these natural salons and you can't find a black woman to give your money to? smh. I can't.

I know the Quote. I wondered where it came from.
 

JazzyOleBabe

Well-Known Member
I actually met her at the Phila Hair Show this year. She is a very down to earth person who knows what she is up against and has been up against. She has talent and had a demo at the show with black models. So she was not in the correct line when they were giving out melanin.(LOL). The girl knows black hair and studied hard to be knowledgeable about the care of black hair. Her shop is definitely in the hood area.
 

PJaye

Well-Known Member
^^^ That makes no difference to me. I would set my money on fire and dance around it with glee before putting it into her wallet. There's a reason why she focused on Black hair as opposed to white hair.
 
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