Dayton Daily News

Women petition for addition of Afro emojis

They hope group approves inclusive internet symbols.

- Sandra E. Garcia

Many people connected to the African diaspora have Afros. And like anyone else, they send emojis to their friends — a zombie, say, or a mermaid or a genie.

But which emoji can they use to represent themselves?

Right now, 2,823 emojis are recognized by the Unicode Consortium, the nonprofit that provides standards for text on the internet and oversees emojis. Fifty-nine additional emojis are on the way, including a deaf person, interracia­l couples, a mechanical arm and falafel.

Yet there are still no emojis of any person with an Afro, even though symbols exist for women and men with long and short hair, curly and straight hair, and blond, black and red hair.

Rhianna Jones, 28, is on a mission to change that.

She and a friend, Kerrilyn Gibson, 25, have started a Change.org petition calling for the addition of an Afro emoji designed by Gibson. It has more than 2,000 signatures, and Jones said they planned to submit the emoji to the Unicode Consortium today.

“The beauty of culture inclusivit­y in this political climate is that our people are awakening,” Jones said in an interview. “What is amazing about our culture is that we have big hair, big energy, big stories and big voices. Emojis are the best way we can encapsulat­e our personalit­y in digital conversati­ons.”

The Unicode Consortium, which acts as the gatekeeper for emojis, includes executives from Apple, Google, Facebook and other tech companies. They meet quarterly and agree to induct approved emojis once a year.

“It’s a long process,” Jones said.

Unicode allows for close to 70 emojis to be added per year, according to Greg Welch, a Unicode board member.

“The number of emojis is becoming quite large,” Welch said in an interview. “Every emoji adds to the amount of memory space on every phone. This isn’t a big deal if you have the latest phone, but if you’re in a developing country, with a small phone and not a lot of memory, it could be a big deal. This is why we don’t open the floodgates.”

According to Welch, approvals to proposals like this one would warrant numerous emojis in the future.

“Proposals like this actually require a lot of engineerin­g to implement,” he said. “This feels like another in a continuing series of proposals that all give the user an opportunit­y to customize to their appearance.”

When the Unicode Consortium creates a standard for an emoji, companies then have to design and incorporat­e the emoji into their code and operating systems.

After Unicode approves the emoji, it takes companies like Apple or Google several months to translate the standard to be compatible with their devices.

Jones, a freelance writer in New York who has a brown Afro, said she was inspired by her personal struggle with her hair as a biracial woman.

“I grew up feeling incredibly self-conscious of my hair because when I was younger the only societal norm of beauty in the media was straight, silkened hair,” Jones said. “People don’t really think about hair privilege.”

She added: “All these kids that are growing up on their devices don’t see themselves reflected. I would like them to be able to see themselves.”

Natural black hair has often been seen historical­ly as unkempt or simply not the standard. Last month, New York City banned discrimina­tion based on hairstyle, through its Commission on Human Rights. The law made New York one of the few cities in the country to legally link prejudice and personal presentati­on.

Activists and others have long made the case for natural black hair. Carolina Contreras, 32, is one of them.

She opened one of the first natural hair salons in the Dominican Republic and provides workshops and classes for young women on the island to learn how to style their natural hair. She has spent the last eight years working to “revolution­ize the way black women see their hair by teaching them the correct way of caring for it,” she said in an interview Wednesday.

“Some women tell me, ‘I can’t wear my natural hair to a corporate job,’ but you can; they are just going to have to see much more than just your hair,” said Contreras, who is opening a natural hair salon in New York this year.

“Black hair has not stolen anything,” she said. “It is not corrupt. It is not cheating anyone. It cannot be bad hair.”

Many black women now see themselves in spaces they were not used to occupying, and they are pushing to make those spaces bigger and more encompassi­ng. “With the Afro emoji, I want to create a space where we can bring that big-hair energy and celebrate our roots in digital spaces,” said Jones, who added that it was important that the emoji be “for us, by us.”

“It would be impossible for any singular design to encompass the multitextu­ral complexity of Afro hair, with the variety in coils, lengths, volumes,” she said. “However, we feel our design is discernibl­y an Afro; it grows up, defies gravity and takes up space.”

‘All these kids that are growing u pon their devices don’t see themselves reflected. I would like them to be able to see themselves.’ Rhianna Jones, who, along with friend, Kerrilyn Gibson, started a Change.org petition calling for the addition of an Afro emoji.

 ?? UNICODE CONSORTIUM VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Unicode Consortium considers new emojis for 2019. The new emojis and variants, which emphasize inclusivit­y, are expected to come out later this year. Change.org is requesting emojis with an Afro hairstyle.
UNICODE CONSORTIUM VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES The Unicode Consortium considers new emojis for 2019. The new emojis and variants, which emphasize inclusivit­y, are expected to come out later this year. Change.org is requesting emojis with an Afro hairstyle.
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