'Hijab is like a key': Myanmar blogger
battles bias with beauty campaign
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[August 14, 2018]
By Shoon Naing
YANGON, August 14 (Reuters) - Muslims in
Buddhist-majority Myanmar usually keep a low profile for fear of
intimidation, but Win Lae Phyu Sin, one of the community's rare bloggers
on beauty care, has gone the other way.
The 19-year-old was the center of attraction at a recent launch of
beauty products in Yangon, her striking multi-colored make-up offset by
a long-sleeved green-and-white gown and matching hijab, a headscarf worn
by some Muslim women.
"I don't regret my decision to wear the hijab," the blogger said. "Our
God opens many ways for me. Hijab is like a key for me. I can use it to
go where I want to go, and do what I want."
Muslims, who make up about 5 percent of the nation of around 50 million,
say they have not been able to open new mosques in decades and struggle
to rent apartments from Buddhist landlords.
Systematic persecution of Muslims is growing in Myanmar, rights groups
say, though world attention has focused on its stateless Rohingya
Muslims, with the United Nations and aid groups saying more than 700,000
were driven into neighboring Bangladesh after an army crackdown last
year.
But many Muslims of all ethnicities had been refused national identity
documents, and denied access to some places of worship, Burma Human
Rights Network said in a report last year.
For some of Win Lae Phyu Sin's students, her tutorials are not merely
about applying eyeshadow and highlighter, but also about building
confidence and pride in an identity constantly questioned by Buddhist
fellow citizens.
"I saw her applying make-up while wearing the hijab and it's amazingly
beautiful," said Hay Mann Aung, 20.
"I wanted to be as beautiful as her."
Win Lae Phyu Sin's effort to impart a cool, chic vibe to the image of
Myanmar Muslims, deploying stylish clothes that match her hijabs,
elaborate mascara, and eyeshadow layered in bold colors, has drawn
admirers.
She has 6,000 followers on social media site Facebook and 600 students
have attended more than 150 classes on the use of cosmetics run in a
makeshift studio.
(For photo essay, click on https://reut.rs/2Oxv6wu)
CRITICISM
But her high profile has drawn criticism and even discrimination: a
Buddhist woman who enrolled in her class backed out on discovering Win
Lae Phyu Sin was Muslim.
Some Facebook commenters have attacked her for being too flamboyant and
using make-up, which conservative Muslims regard as taboo, but the
blogger refuses to let critics waste her time.
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Blogger Win Lae Phyu Sin, 19, travels in a taxi to a high school
reunion with her former classmates in Yangon, Myanmar, May 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Ann Wang
"When people attack or criticize me outside and online, I choose to
ignore them," she said. "I have a lot of work to do."
Her growing fame, fed by dozens of online make-up tutorials and
events at shopping malls, has prompted trips to Myanmar's second
largest city, Mandalay, and she plans to visit Kuala Lumpur, the
capital of neighboring Malaysia.
Win Lae Phyu Sin started with tutorials on make-up filmed in a
bedroom shared with her sister, posting them on Facebook before
offering classes.
"After I graduated from high school, my boyfriend gave me make-up
palettes as a present," she said. "I didn't know how to use them so
I Googled it and learned."
But acquiring professional expertise proved too expensive, so Win
Lae Phyu Sin came up with the idea of six-hour sessions, aimed at
regular "girls like me", that cost less than $25.
A year on, she brings to every lesson two bags packed with
eyeliners, brushes and small mirrors for every student. At one
recent session, she discussed skin types before handing out bottles
of foundation and eyeshadow for students to try.
Win Lae Phyu Sin is undeterred by those who denigrate her for being
a Muslim and wearing a hijab that exposes the face.
"'Don't you know you will go to hell if you do that? Why don't you
take off the hijab during shooting?'" she quoted some Facebook
critics as asking.
But she added, "I will keep on doing this, because this is my
passion."
(Additional reporting by Ann Wang; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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