Source: Rwanda Focus
When entering one of the cosmetic shops in town, the sight that greets you is of rows of products that are supposed to give smoother, lighter skin to the almost exclusive female clientele. "I want my skin to be brighter and smoother," one lady in the shop explains, confirming the persistent perception among some women that lighter-skinned people are more beautiful or have a better social and economic status.
The shop vendor meanwhile is mixing different creams and lotions without any measuring tools, seemingly expert on what to use. "We give people lotions according to their skin," she says. Asked how they do that, she looks me up and instantly proposes the kind of lotion she thinks may work with my skin. Leaving the shop, I keep wondering if any of the ladies there bother to ask what products are contained in the mixtures they are getting.
What people do not realize, according to Dr. Jeanne Kimonyo, a dermatologist at CHUK, is that many of these lotions have lightening products in them, even when it is not indicated on the containers. "I get quite a number of people who come to see me wondering why their skin is getting clearer," Kimonyo says. Most of them say they are just using a simple lotion that they thought was free of any lightening agents.
The lightening products commonly used in Rwanda contain hydroquinone and corticosteroids. Although these products are used in cosmetics, they are also used in dermatology when treating some illnesses. "Corticosteroids are used to treat people with inflammatory skin conditions, people who have spots that are darker than the rest of their skin," Kimonyo explains.
Other people that are also treated with corticosteroids are those with a condition known as vitiligo – a skin condition in which there is a loss of brown pigment from areas of skin, resulting in irregular white patches that feel like normal skin. "Some of them feel really uncomfortable when there are only a few black/brown spots left, so we use corticosteroids to take them away. But it's all carefully done."
'Psychological scars'
There are many products that are available for the purpose of lightening skin. Some of these work by decreasing the amount of pigment that the body makes naturally, others claim to actually bleach the skin while others work by killing melanin, the substance that lends skin its pigmentation and protects the skin from the cancer-causing ultraviolet rays of the sun. Everyone has melanin in their skin; the more melanin present, the darker the skin.
"Personally, I would not dare use them," says Diane Uwera, another customer in the shop. "I prefer to use something that will not change me. In addition, those products are really expensive, what happens when you can no longer afford them? I would be ashamed to get out of the house for people would be used to me being light and then I suddenly become dark."
The desire to change one skin's color is more than physical. "The non-acceptance of your skin color or an attempt to make it lighter shows deep, ingrained psychological scars that have transcended generations and will continue to transcend generations unless we declare to ourselves that we are happy with who we are," writes Derrick Johnson, a psychologist.
He continues: "The psychological scarring is so deep that we don't even recognize it as being alien to our mentality. Instead we accept the world's perception of beauty and we despise our own. The acceptance of feeling inferior is not recognized and so we harm ourselves in the pursuit of false beauty."
Yet skin lightening has many consequences in the long run. "People are looking for instant gratification, forgetting that they come with risks," says Kimonyo.
As she explains, these products can contain toxins such as mercury or potent steroids that can cause serious long-term adverse effects. "These effects can be especially significant because of the large body surface that is involved. In short, when any chemical is used in large concentrations for long periods of time, there will be effects," she points out.
Hairy skin
When people are lightening their skins, those products are not only causing skin depigmentation – destroying the substances which give the skin its coloring – but also taking away layers of their skin, making it thin. This makes the skin more sensitive to the sun and, as it is less protected, it is easily attacked by bacteria and viruses that cause skin diseases.
The thinness of the skin also complicates the healing of wounds, Kimonyo says. "If it takes 5 days for normal people to heal, it will take that person 15 days." And the products containing corticosteroids and hydroquinone can cause the skin to be more hairy, especially the face. "They also cause acne and, in the end, lead to skin cancer," the dermatologist warns.
Some people who want to stop using lightening lotions find it very hard, and at times think they are allergic to any other lotion apart from the one they were using. "It's not allergies," Kimonyo says. "They just have been using them for so long, they become addicted. Like any other addiction, if you try to stop it suddenly, you will start itching and think it's because you have changed products."
Therefore, Kimonyo advises to get guidance from a dermatologist who will help to stop using the products gradually.
But as one writer put it, the best way to help everyone involved is "to discourage the erroneous belief that skin color affects beauty."