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Calgary

Teen entrepreneur uses childhood illness as launchpad to help other Black girls and women

A young girl's battle with sickle cell disease inspired a range of products that's now helping other Black women and girls maintain and protect their hair.

After losing her hair, Eleora Ogundare and her mum developed products to help others

Teen entrepreneur uses childhood illness as motivation for helping others

1 year ago
Duration 1:32
A Calgary teen overcame sickle cell disease, regaining both her health and her hair. Now she and her mum are trying to help other Black women and girls protect and maintain a part of themselves that can help form their identity.

Eleora Ogundare was diagnosed with sickle cell disease when she was eight years old.

During the course of treatments and chemotherapy for the red blood cell disorder, her hair startedfalling out.

"My hair was my confidence because the kids I was around, they had like the long, nice long hair," said Eleora, whodecided with her mum to cut her hair and make the change quick, hoping kids in school wouldn't make comments.

"I felt, like, naked almost because,the thing that was like giving me confidence, I didn't have it anymore. I had to cut it all off."

Eleora is now a healthy 15-year-old, but instead of closing thatchapter of her life, she decided to help others facing a similar challenge with their hair and their sense of identity.

A teenage girl wearing a pale pink sweater adjusts a shelf filled with bottles and tubs of hair products.
Eleora Ogundare has turned her experience as a child suffering sickle cell disease into a business, creating a line of products to help other women and girls with specific hair types and needs. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

Strands of identity

While Eleora was battling for her health, her mum was trying to find solutions for her young daughter's hair, and with it, hersense of self.

"The struggle for them is identity, you know, trying to understand why their hair is not as silky as the next person in her class," said Eugenia Ogundare, Eleora's mother, who says hair for a Black women is "hercrown."

"But then having to lose that hair was a whole different ball game altogether."

Eugenia says during months of treatments, they spent time trying out different oils, butters, and creams, eventually determiningtheir ownformula and using it to launch a line of products geared toward Black hair types.

A woman with thin, reddish dreadlocks stands in front of a display of Eleora Beauty products.
Eleora's mum, Eugenia, says she's proud of the progress her daughter has made in helping other young women through the business they work on together. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

"One of the problems Black women actually face wouldbe the edges, so that's the first thing we get, that, 'Oh, it actually worksfor my edges'," said Eugenia, who has received plenty of positive feedback aboutthe products she and her daughter work together on.

"And then we get the mothers who say, 'Oh, my daughter's hair was hard to manage. It's more manageable [now]'."

Adedoyin Omotara sells the Eleora Beauty line throughboth her salon, Adoniaa Beauty,andthe Adoniaa Collective, a store for Black entrepreneurs at Westbrook Mall.

A woman in glasses with her hair fixed into a bun on top of her head stands in front of a salon while Eleora and her mum stand at a vanity table in the background.
Adedoyin Omotara, the founder of Adoniaa Beauty and the Adoniaa Collective, says young entrepreneurs like Eleora are solving problems for the wider community. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

"It's a huge part of what makes us us, especially physically, but we need to understand the impact it has on us inside," said Omotara, who says she understandsthe pressures to conform that can sometimes arise for Black kids as they become more conscious of their environment and who they are.

Omotara says her own three-year-old has already questioned why his hair is so curly or difficult to comb comparedto the hair of his friends.

"Especially for younger people, they need to understand that there are products that can actually work for our hair so that they don't start to put toxic product in their hair,just to want to look like another Sharon on the street or another Anita on the street."

Regaininghealth, hair, and herself

Now long past the illness she suffered as a child, Eleora hopes that the products created through her experience helpother young Black girls feel empowered to be themselves.

"Our hair is beautiful the way it is and it's different in a good way ...it just expands our culture andreally showswho we are," said the teen,who recently chose to cut her hair again.

"It wasn't as bad this time. Like, I'm more confident in it, and I also just want to teach other, like, young Black girls that, you know, like short hair or like long hair. You can rock it either way."

A range of products in bottles and smaller sprays shows the variety within the Eleora Beauty line, with a beard conditioner taking centre stage.
The line of products created by Eleora and her mum offer solutions for women and girls, as well as men who need specific care for their hair and beards. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

Omotara says the young entrepreneur's story is one that should give hope to their community.

"Whatever problems we have in our community, we remain the solution to those problems because we know where it bites the most, right? And that is why we are the ones to proffer the solution."

"I think we're making a difference in like, young girls lives," said Eleora.

"When I was younger, I kinda wish I had something like this too, to make me feel more confident. But I'm happy that I'm doing it now to help other people."


Young Calgary

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For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)