On Fashion Runway, South Sudan Takes Steps Toward a National Identity
JUBA, South Sudan — Even by the standards of fashion models, the women teetering in their high heels on the dirt catwalk here were remarkably tall and slender. But judging by South Sudan’s many towering inhabitants, they were hardly out of the ordinary in the young nation’s capital.
I always thought that it was a mistake for sympathetic journalists to skip over how distinctive looking southern Sudanese tend to be in the interests of not offending modern customs against Noticing. Without a visual hook for readers to hang the story upon, the long struggle of southern Sudanese to be free of the brown northern Sudanese just sounded like More Bad News Out of Africa.
Fashion folks aren't necessarily the most likable human beings in history, but they do feel themselves exempt from the taboo against seeing with their own two eyes.
7 comments:
South Sudan has some very beautiful women. I'm not really big into Africans, but those people have an elegance that no one should ignore.
They're ethnically closely related to the Ugandans. During the colonial era they constantly lobbied the British to join them with Uganda, but they were rebuffed because of Egyptian pressure.
South Sudan?
You've got to be kidding. Those people are overwhelmingly Bantu.
For beautiful African women look to Somalia, Eritrea, and Ethiopia.
They shouldn't have called their new country South Sudan. When you are trying to break away from something, you need a new name that has no connection to the old place.
There are many types of courage, and the courage to call a tall, elegant woman a tall, elegant woman should not be discounted.
Neil Templeton
so where do Nubians fit in? I went to trade school with a very black, high cheek-boned. curly haired guy. He was striking but very primitive. For some reason I always thought of him as Nubian, but don't see the type in my google searches.
Most famous tall male South Sudanese person I know is the Bulls' Luol Deng.
The Arabs liked Dinka girls as trophies.
http://ukcommentators.blogspot.co.uk/2006/11/sudan-incident-1909.html
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