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IPS Writers in the Blogosphere » beauty http://www.ips.org/blog/ips Turning the World Downside Up Tue, 26 May 2020 22:12:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.1 A beauty pageant with an HIV twist http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/a-beauty-pageant-with-an-hiv-twist/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/a-beauty-pageant-with-an-hiv-twist/#comments Thu, 16 Oct 2014 16:42:57 +0000 Jacquelyne Alesi http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/?p=19163 Last month, in the Ugandan capital of Kampala, some very beautiful people got together to change how the country views HIV.

Y+ Beauty Pageant, a first for young men and women living with HIV in Uganda, took place at the elegant Golf Course Hotel. It was organized by my group, the Uganda Network of Young [...]]]> Last month, in the Ugandan capital of Kampala, some very beautiful people got together to change how the country views HIV.

Y+ Beauty Pageant, a first for young men and women living with HIV in Uganda, took place at the elegant Golf Course Hotel. It was organized by my group, the Uganda Network of Young People Living with HIV & AIDS, under the slogan Beauty with Zero Discrimination,

In my country, to proudly get on stage, show your face and display your name when you are HIV positive is, believe me, a daunting task. I live with HIV and I can tell you it is hard.

The joy of life:  young, beautiful, confident and living with HIV.

The joy of life: young, beautiful, confident and living with HIV.

However, you’d never know this from the contestants’ smiling faces. Youthful, healthy and gorgeous, they walked proudly in immaculately tailored suits and stylish dresses.

Their stories were inspirational.

One contestant said: “I used to get sick as a child when I didn’t take my medication, but now you can see I take it well and am very healthy now.”

Sharifah Nalugo Kyomukama recalled when classmates at university discovered her ARV pills. She decided to disclose her HIV+ status, only to be met with a rash of discrimination. She broke down in tears as she recounted her experience: “Discrimination hurts and it is never okay.”

Fifty contestants, aged 16 to 25, rehearsed with the help of experts during two days for the talent and fashion shows, and 10 finalists were selected.

In the talent portion, they sang, danced, recited poems and monologues about what being HIV positive means to them. Many emphasized the importance of taking medication regularly and engaging in safe sex.

Sex is good

The glitzy event was attended by top leaders from Uganda’s HIV community and local celebrities who came on stage to sing, speak and advocate.

We even had commercial sponsors who were not afraid to be associated to an HIV event, which was broadcast on six TV stations and five radios.

When Uganda’s former vice-president, Dr. Speciosa Wandira-Kazibwe, walked on stage, she was a ball of fire. “You are all beautiful and handsome!” she cheered.

Wild clapping ensued when she told participants there is no shame in their sexuality.

“Sex is the most pleasurable thing you can ever have,” she said. She described her own battle promoting condoms, when churches, mother’s unions and newspapers castigated her for allegedly promoting promiscuity.

However, obstacles and criticism have never deterred this fiery woman. Waving a string of colorful condoms, she happily danced with the contestants.

Proudly positive: blogger Jacquelyne Alesi with winners Sharifah Nalugo Kyomukama and Ronald Juan Kaganda

Proudly positive: finalists at the Beauty with Zero Discrimination
pageant for young Ugandans living with HIV

Professor Vinand Nantulya, chairman of the Ugandan AIDS Commission, spoke angrily against the recently passed HIV Control and Prevention Act.

“Criminalizing HIV and AIDS is wrong, unacceptable and nonsensical,” he told the crowd. “We will not let them get away with it.”

The winners, Sharifah Nalugo Kyomukama, 19, and Ronald Juan Kaganda, 20, were crowned Mr. and Miss Y+ (Youth HIV Positive). They will work as ambassadors in a new HIV prevention campaign.

Sharifah, her tears forgotten, beamed as she received the award. Later, the crowd enjoyed revelry and dancing. We had a blast!

The Y+ Beauty Pageant will be back next year – a public platform where HIV+ youth in Uganda can fight stigma and discrimination and celebrate their lives.

Jac-1-150x150Jacquelyne Alesi is a wife, mother, daughter, HIV activist and Programme Director at the Uganda Network of Young People Living with HIV/AIDS, an organization that since 2003 works to improve the quality of life for HIV-positive youth in Uganda.

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Jacaranda Watch http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/jacaranda-watch-2/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/jacaranda-watch-2/#comments Mon, 26 Oct 2009 08:37:40 +0000 Gender Masala http://www.ips.org/blog/mdg3/?p=931 jac-41

The magic continues...

jac-2

... with scarlet bougainvilleas for contrast.

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Purple rain, purple dreamscape http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/purple-rain-purple-dreamscape/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/purple-rain-purple-dreamscape/#comments Wed, 21 Oct 2009 06:38:45 +0000 Gender Masala http://www.ips.org/blog/mdg3/?p=900 I just have to do it. This posting is not about gender, politics, foreign aid or photoshopped  models.

It is about beauty. The beauty of nature: the splendid jacarandas blooming just now that turn Pretoria into a lilac-purple dreamscape.

It s said that  50,000 jacarandas line the streets.   When the blossoms drift to the [...]]]> By F. Beaumont

By F. Beaumont

I just have to do it. This posting is not about gender, politics, foreign aid or photoshopped  models.

It is about beauty. The beauty of nature: the splendid jacarandas blooming just now that turn Pretoria into a lilac-purple dreamscape.

It s said that  50,000 jacarandas line the streets.   When the blossoms drift to the ground, carpetting sidewalks, it’s like  a magical  purple rain. Awesome.

By F. Beaumont

By F. Beaumont

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Beauty as an optical illusion http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/fashion-models-are-optical-illusions/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/fashion-models-are-optical-illusions/#comments Mon, 12 Oct 2009 07:00:29 +0000 Gender Masala http://www.ips.org/blog/mdg3/?p=868 Fashion models in ads are optical illusions and the award-winning  video Evolution of Beauty, from the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty proves the point eloquently. Watch it at:

http://www.campaignforrealbeauty.ca/bblank.asp?id=6895

Digital cosmetic surgery – nip-and-tuck, botox and liposuction, on the screen, with a click – render these models picture-perfect (excuse the pun) and thoroughly unreal.

There [...]]]> Fashion models in ads are optical illusions and the award-winning  video Evolution of Beauty, from the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty proves the point eloquently. Watch it at:

http://www.campaignforrealbeauty.ca/bblank.asp?id=6895

Digital cosmetic surgery – nip-and-tuck, botox and liposuction, on the screen, with a click – render these models picture-perfect (excuse the pun) and thoroughly unreal.

There is no way a non-photoshopped  woman can attain that perfection. Hey, we are human. We have flaws.

In France and the UK, women lawmakers recently proposed that ads should disclose when their photos have been digitally manipulated to a great extent. They argue that bodily digital perfection in ads undermines the body  image and self-esteem of girls and women.

Anorexia, bulimia, eating disorders, obsession with thinness  and unnecessary cosmetic surgery follow. Meanwhile, sales of weight-loss products and push-up bras soar.

The tricky problem for lawmakers and advertisers alike is where to draw the line between (acceptable) touching up a pimple or a wrinkle and engaging in full (unacceptable) deception.

Among the most egregious offenders: the French magazine Paris Match nipped the bulging love handles of President Nicholas Sarkozy, in evidence while he canoed bare-chested in the USA.

Oprah Winfrey always has a waist in the cover of O magazine, while flat-chested Keira Knightley miraculously acquired big boobs for her recent Chanel Mademoiselle perfume ad.

The alcoholic drink Campari must have some magical effects on bones because actress Jessica Alba got sharper collarbone and knee definition, longer arms and a tinier waist in its recent ad.

Eating disorders once afflicted mostly affluent white teen girls in the West.  Now they have spread across the world, among all ages and ethnic groups and, increasingly, among young men.

It is  harder to quantify how the unreal perfect bodies in ads distort the self-image of girls and boys worldwide.

Watch the video and share your thoughts about the proposed disclosure measures.

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