Daily Trust Saturday

Beauty Expo

- Andreas Illmer DATE DATE BBC.com

This literary festival is set to host Zainab Alkali, the first female novelist in Northern Nigeria. During the event, she is going to talk about ‘Invisible Borders’, her latest book.

The Lagos Comic Con themed ‘Empower, Heritage and Future’ is in its 6th edition this year and has grown from 300 guests in 2012 into Africa’s biggest geek event with over 3000 guests in 2016 in a one day event. Aside from exhibition­s, awards, competitio­ns and stage performanc­es, the event also hosts numerous workshops and panel discussion­s on industry

Hrelevant topics with speakers from all over the world. ollywood actress Gal Gadot has thrown her support behind two young women in Sri Lanka after they were cyber-bullied for cosplaying as Wonder Woman.

The two had become the target of a wave of online memes, body-shaming and harassment.

Both Gadot, who played the character in the recent blockbuste­r movie, and its director Patty Jenkins tweeted support and encouragem­ent.

When Amaya Suriyapper­uma and fellow cosplayer Seshani Cooray decided to dress up as Wonder Woman at the Comic Con 2017 event in Colombo, they were not expecting it to send them on a rollercoas­ter ride of demeaning online memes.

After the first day, photograph­ers at the event began sharing their pictures online and photos of the two women were picked up by Facebook groups mocking them for their appearance.

It was only the next day the two found out. It was Ms Suriyapper­uma’s birthday, and friends who had spotted the memes tried to keep them secret, but that was bound to fail.

“First I was shocked,” Ms Suriyapper­uma told the BBC. I didn’t really let it get to me although I was genuinely baffled at why these people would spend their valuable time hating someone they don’t even know.”

Her fellow cosplayer agrees. “I was offended and shocked at how the internet reacted,” said Ms Cooray.

“Most of the memes and comments I received seemed to objectify me.”

She was drawn to the character of Wonder Woman because she feels it empowers young women like herself to be independen­t and strong minded.

Ms Suriyapper­uma says she didn’t reply to any of the comments or publicly retaliate because she thought they didn’t deserve her energies.

“Instead, me and my friends and the whole Sri Lankan geek community would band together and silently report every single meme and post and page. Some even got unpublishe­d on Facebook as a result.”

What then happened was a remarkable reversal of the tide and an overwhelmi­ng wave of support started building up online.

“There was immense support on the Facebook page of Geek Club of Sri Lanka and people I didn’t even know personally were messaging me asking me to stay strong,” Ms Suriyapper­uma recalls. “It was amazing.”

One such tweet by a complete stranger pledging support went viral - and that’s how the story found its way to Hollywood and reached Patty Jenkins and Gal Gadot.

And once the two of them threw some serious Hollywood weight into the ring, the attention the two Sri Lankan women received went to a whole new level.

“It definitely feels amazing to be recognised and praised by Patty Jenkins and Gal Gadot herself !” Ms Suriyapper­uma said. “I’m a huge fan of Gal Gadot so this has been amazing.”

This event was put in place to bring together various businesses and industries engaged and in beauty products service, personal care and lots the country more from within and beyond to exhibit their cosmetolog­y, products in medical beauty tools, salon equipment, and nail services.

Starring Ramsey Nouah and Omoni Oboli, this new comedy film titled ‘My Wife & I’ is about love, marriage and everything in between. It features more stars like Jemima Osunde, Dorcas Shola Fapson, Sambasa Nzeribe and many more.

Ms Cooray was equally stunned that their idols actually recognised them. “It felt amazing - my inner fangirl is never going to forget this!”

Their case sparked a wider online debate around the problems of bullying online.

“I think it’s actually a good thing that this is a public story,” Ms Suriyapper­uma explains. “If we didn’t get this much coverage this would’ve been just another case of cyber-bullying.

“But now everyone knows it and thus we have opened a very important conversati­on about bullying and body shaming.”

As just one example, an online petition has been started to put more pressure on Facebook to monitor content for hate or cyber-bullying and block such posts.

But the case goes beyond just the online world, Ms Suriyapper­uma points out. It ties in with the broader goal of empowering women generally.

Looking at her own experience­s growing up in Sri Lanka, she says the country’s society needs to see examples of women who stand up to hate without running and hiding away or retaliatin­g by going down to their level.

“If people start seeing women being strong as a normal thing - which is what the movie tried to do as well as what I want - then more and more women will stop tolerating harassment.”

Source:

 ??  ?? Sri Lankan real-life Wonder Woman Amaya Suriyapper­uma
Sri Lankan real-life Wonder Woman Amaya Suriyapper­uma
 ??  ?? VENUE: LAGOS NECA HOUSE, ALAUSA, IKEJA,
VENUE: LAGOS NECA HOUSE, ALAUSA, IKEJA,
 ??  ?? VENUE: MULTIPURPO­SE HALL, GOMBE STATE UNIVERSITY
VENUE: MULTIPURPO­SE HALL, GOMBE STATE UNIVERSITY

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