Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Applying the political power of our eyeliner

- By Zahra Hankir Zahra Hankir is a writer and journalist based in New York. This essay is adapted from her forthcomin­g book “Eyeliner: A Cultural History,” which will be published Nov. 14. @zahrahanki­r

Coming of age as a Muslim with Lebanese and Egyptian heritage in the U.K., I was in constant pursuit of connection­s to my ethnic identity. Against a social backdrop that othered my family and me, I was drawn to Queen Nefertiti’s distinctiv­e cat-eye. The ancient Egyptian queen and her lined eyes connected me to a constellat­ion of beguiling non-Western women, including my ancestors; she sparked my interest in kohl, the earliest iteration of eyeliner.

In searching for eyeliner’s meaning in history, I discovered that this simple cosmetic holds stories of profound cultural significan­ce — and even rebellion. I encountere­d figures and practices beyond those I knew from Western music and film. I observed the pigment in the Arab world’s deserts and the savannas of Africa, Iran’s hair salons, and the alleyways of Tokyo. I found it on the faces of Indian storytelle­rs and Palestinia­n activists, and in the Mexican American chola community.

To minorities and people of color, eyeliner transcends aesthetics. Starting in ancient Egypt, this ubiquitous object has been used for myriad purposes. It has shielded eyes from the sun, cured eye infections, warded off evil spirits and honored the gods. I considered kohl my most important makeup item in that it offered protection. For me, it symbolized a rejection of Eurocentri­c beauty norms and was a celebratio­n of my culture.

During my research, I was drawn to Mexican American women who also wield eyeliner as a tool connecting them to their heritage. The chola aesthetic — featuring bold wings, lip liner, hoop earrings, nameplate necklaces and acrylics, among other attributes — has roots in the Pachuca style of the 1940s. Pachucas were Mexican American women who challenged norms of femininity within their own community and the broader American milieu; some expressed their defiance by wearing zoot suits, pompadours and dark lipstick.

The aesthetic was partly a response to the discrimina­tion Mexican Americans faced before, during and after the Zoot Suit Riots. Over time, the look evolved into the chola style, which was also influenced by socio-political changes, urban culture (particular­ly in the barrios of Los Angeles) and broader fashion trends. Eyeliner consequent­ly became an instrument that asserted Mexican identity in the face of the pressure to “assimilate” in the U.S.

Meanwhile, media portrayals erroneousl­y associated the aesthetic with gang culture, bolstering harmful stereotype­s. Over the years, many elements of chola style have been appropriat­ed without proper acknowledg­ement of its cultural significan­ce — see, for example, Gwen Stefani in her “Luxurious” music video.

Outside the U.S., the use of makeup among Mexicans has roots in Central America’s Indigenous cultures, including the Maya and Aztecs. Aztec women prettified their faces with natural materials such as wax. While the link between these practices and the chola aesthetic isn’t explicit, using makeup around the eyes as a form of self-expression is not new to the region.

The use of eyeliner among some members of the Zapatista movement in Mexico also became emblematic. The group emerged in the 1990s in response to perceived injustices toward Indigenous communitie­s. Zapatista women cover their faces with balaclavas for anonymity and as a symbol of collective identity. With only their eyes typically left exposed, many choose to accentuate them with wings.

Beyond the Zapatistas, eyeliner holds a significan­t place in popular Mexican culture. During Mexico’s golden era of cinema, celebritie­s such as María Félix boasted prominent wings. Mexican makeup trends have evolved, but cat-eye enjoys a constant presence.

Back in the U.S., I interviewe­d women who embody chola style or identify as Chola. Winnonah Perez of San Jose stood out. Perez, 48, wears her bold wings to honor her late mother and to channel her Mexican identity. She says it’s her “magic,” the vehicle through which she communicat­es “inner strength and power.” When she faces racial profiling because of her appearance, she uses the moment as an opportunit­y to

I considered kohl my most important makeup item in that it offered protection. For me, it symbolized a rejection of Eurocentri­c beauty norms and was a celebratio­n of my culture.

educate.

Her parents’ families had emigrated to the U.S. several generation­s ago, seeking better lives. Perez’s father faced discrimina­tion and economic hardship; he would tragically take his own life, years after his wife did, too. Perez has committed her life to upholding their legacies. “I became determined to live out the happiness they couldn’t grasp,” she told me. “Part of the way I do that is carrying on with their estilo,” style.

Though she doesn’t identify as chola, Jennifer Torres, a 26-yearold model from South L.A., says her eyeliner also connects her to her Mexican ancestors. “When I wear my makeup, and I have eyeliner on, I feel powerful. I feel like it’s my armor,” she said. “I think of my mother and aunties about how they used this tool to transform themselves into these beautiful brown women, and I feel like a beautiful brown woman myself.”

I’ve come to view eyeliner as a cultural throughlin­e that binds stories of rebellion and identity. Meeting Torres, Perez and others demonstrat­ed there’s intersecti­onality to be found in this calligraph­y around our eyes.

Consider Iran, where women are required by law to cover most of their bodies. The face then takes on even greater importance for them, and the deliberate lining of one’s eyes becomes a potent form of self-expression — and potential defiance.

Though the contexts are different, countless women across the global south have used this same instrument to proclaim their histories and strength. In diaspora communitie­s, particular­ly, the act of applying pigment has the power to become political, and a way to resist cultural erasure.

The wings of women like Perez seem to declare, I refuse to minimize myself. It’s an ethos I try to embody as an Arab Muslim woman in America, especially when the political climate works to dehumanize my people. When I line my eyes, like Torres, I think of my sister, mother and grandmothe­rs — and the women worldwide who carry forward the legacies of those who came before them.

 ?? Michael Sohn Associated Press ?? THE BUST of ancient Egyptian Queen Nefertiti and her distinctiv­e cat-eye.
Michael Sohn Associated Press THE BUST of ancient Egyptian Queen Nefertiti and her distinctiv­e cat-eye.

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