French Miss Africa Contests Proudly Celebrate Dual Cultures in Paris

 Lyse Amissah (c) celebrates her 2024 victory. (AFP)
Lyse Amissah (c) celebrates her 2024 victory. (AFP)
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French Miss Africa Contests Proudly Celebrate Dual Cultures in Paris

 Lyse Amissah (c) celebrates her 2024 victory. (AFP)
Lyse Amissah (c) celebrates her 2024 victory. (AFP)

The recent scene in a Paris theatre was loud and tumultuous with hundreds of spectators backing their favorites in the Miss Ivory Coast/France 2024 contest, one of many events at which France's African diaspora celebrate their dual culture.

"Our parents made beautiful children in Europe," remarked a master of ceremony as the 19 contestants took to the stage wearing, in turn, traditional wax dresses, swimsuits and evening wear.

After four hours of suspense, Lyse Amissah, contestant number 18, was declared the winner.

"I am very touched, grateful and proud," said the 22-year-old student who was born in Paris to Ivorian parents.

A few weeks earlier, during rehearsal, Amissah -- who wears her hair short and dyed blond -- said that the contest represented more than just winning a beauty pageant.

"It's a way to get as close to my roots as possible," she said, adding she had always been "steeped in Ivorian culture".

Flora Sy, president of the Miss Ivory Coast/France committee, said that although the contestants are "very proud" to be French, "it is also important for us to show our Ivorian culture".

Things weren't always this upbeat, remembered Mams Yaffa who organized the very first such African contest in France, Miss Mali/France in 2002.

- 'Role models' -

Casual xenophobia and racism were widespread at the time, including at the highest level of state.

The image of Malians was "horribly stigmatizing", said Yaffa, who is now deputy mayor in Paris's 18th district where many residents are of African background.

The first Miss Mali/France contest "provided the framework for activism" and the women competing were "role models for our younger sisters", he said.

Their activism was aimed at promoting hygiene, education and health, and to persuade women not to bleach their skin.

Topics today include illegal immigration. Miss Senegal/France recently talked with young people in Senegal "to convince them not to get into one of those boats", said Mamadou Thiam, who runs the Franco-Senegalese organizing committee.

Amissah is using her fame to help end the "taboo" surrounding endometriosis in Ivory Coast.

Close contacts created by the beauty contests between France and African countries sometimes contrasts with deteriorating diplomatic relations between France and some of its former colonies on the continent.

A recent example is Mali, where the military government asked French troops to leave after 10 years of anti-extremist missions there.

But Yaffa brushed off such tensions, saying his organization will never allow itself to become the "collateral damage" of diplomacy.

"The problem is governments, not the population," he said.



Egypt Recovers 3 Ancient Artifacts Found in the Netherlands

This picture shows a partial view of Cairo on August 25, 2024. (Photo by Khaled DESOUKI / AFP)
This picture shows a partial view of Cairo on August 25, 2024. (Photo by Khaled DESOUKI / AFP)
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Egypt Recovers 3 Ancient Artifacts Found in the Netherlands

This picture shows a partial view of Cairo on August 25, 2024. (Photo by Khaled DESOUKI / AFP)
This picture shows a partial view of Cairo on August 25, 2024. (Photo by Khaled DESOUKI / AFP)

Egypt recovered three ancient artifacts that were smuggled out of the country and found in the Netherlands, where two of the items were for sale in an antiques shop, Egyptian officials said Tuesday.
The items retrieved include a mummified head from the Hellenistic period, a ceramic funerary figurine dating to Egypt’s New Kingdom era (664-332 B.C.), and part of a wooden tomb bearing an inscription of the goddess Isis from 663-504 B.C., the Egyptian embassy in The Hague said in a statement. The head was found in good condition, showing remnants of teeth and hair, The Associated Press reported.
Dutch police and the cultural heritage inspection unit retrieved the figurines and parts of the tomb after determining that they were smuggled out of Egypt. A Dutch individual handed over the mummified head, which he had inherited from a family member, to local authorities.
The three artifacts are believed to have been stolen and smuggled after they were discovered through illegal excavation, according to Egyptian authorities. No details were provided about when those items were believed to have been unearthed and smuggled.
Repatriation from the Netherlands is part of Egypt’s wider push to stop trafficking of stolen antiquities. More than 30,000 artifacts have been recovered since 2014.
Last year, an ancient wooden sarcophagus that was featured at the Houston Museum of Natural Sciences was returned to Egypt after US authorities determined it was smuggled years ago.