
The Language of the Crown
Across the continent, a hairstyle could announce a marriage, a season of grief, a coming of age, or a kingdom. Before words, the head spoke. A reading of African hair as the oldest social language we have.
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The Journal

In the Kanem region of Chad, women wear hair to the waist — and have for generations. Not because it grows faster, but because of a powder, a butter, and a ritual passed from mother to daughter. The culture behind the compound.
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Across the continent, a hairstyle could announce a marriage, a season of grief, a coming of age, or a kingdom. Before words, the head spoke. A reading of African hair as the oldest social language we have.

In many pre-colonial African societies, hair communicated everything: age, marital status, clan, grief, celebration. Colonisation disrupted this. Here is an attempt to trace what was there.

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Heritage, plant science, and the practice of caring for Type 4 hair — sent only when there is something worth reading. No noise.