Sunday Times

GET REAL, DOLL

New range puts skin in the game

- By LEONIE WAGNER

● Ndanaka stands 30cm tall, watching the world with wide-eyed wonder. Her face and hands make people look twice. She has vitiligo, a condition that causes the skin to lose pigmentati­on, resulting in discoloure­d patches.

In Shona her name means “I am beautiful”. She is the latest in a range of dolls that could help change beauty standards in the toy industry, say entreprene­urs Caroline Hlahla and Khulile Vilakazi-Ofosu.

They are the creators of the Sibahle Collection, which also includes Zuri, a doll with albinism.

Hlahla and Vilakazi-Ofosu say parents often struggle to find dolls that look like their children.

“Dolls like Ndanaka speak to those children with vitiligo to reaffirm that they are beautiful. These dolls teach children to appreciate beauty in all its forms and grow up feeling like they are enough, they don’t have to look a certain way to stand up proudly and feel beautiful,” Hlahla said.

The idea for Ndanaka came after they’d watched a television interview with actress Leleti Khumalo, who has vitiligo.

The collection teaches children to appreciate beauty in all its forms and grow up feeling like they are enough

Caroline Hlahla

“We have positioned ourselves to be the voice for kids who have previously not been represente­d by the beauty and toy industry,” said Vilakazi-Ofosu.

“Our brand is about teaching kids to love themselves the way they are and to embrace and celebrate diversity.”

The duo launched a crowdfundi­ng page to raise funds to manufactur­e Ndanaka and merchandis­e for some of their other dolls.

Their collection of vanilla-scented dolls also includes Nobuhle, whose name means “the one who represents beauty” in Zulu; Bontle, meaning “beauty” in Sotho; Neha, an Indian heritage doll; and a coloured doll named Ayana.

The business was founded in 2016 after Vilakazi-Ofosu’s daughter, who was three years old at the time, said she wanted “flowy hair”.

The Sibahle Collection — meaning “we are beautiful” in Zulu — was born out of the need to encourage black children to be comfortabl­e in their own skins. Each doll’s name is therefore a reference to “beautiful” or “beauty” in an indigenous language.

“Representa­tion for kids is very important. It informs their outlook on life and their selfesteem,” Vilakazi-Ofosu said.

“Until recently, there has only been one standard of beauty. If we teach our kids from a young age to accept who they are, we will begin to chip away a little at the many divisive issues that we are currently facing in this world.”

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 ?? Picture: Alaister Russell ?? Nobuntu Morake, a young woman who has the skin condition vitiligo, holds up Ndanaka, a doll in the Sibahle Collection that was inspired by people with vitiligo.
Picture: Alaister Russell Nobuntu Morake, a young woman who has the skin condition vitiligo, holds up Ndanaka, a doll in the Sibahle Collection that was inspired by people with vitiligo.

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