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Why Willow Smith says she and Jaden felt 'shunned' by the Black community

She said she felt she wasn't accepted because she expressed herself.

Why Willow Smith says she and Jaden felt 'shunned' by the Black community
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images, FILE
October 15, 2020, 11:10 AM

Willow Smith and her brother Jaden follow their own set of rules when it comes to expressing themselves.

However, Willow says their self-expression came at a steep -- and oftentimes difficult -- price.

Speaking on her family's Facebook Watch series "Red Table Talk" this week, the 19-year-old singer opened up about how she felt their sense of style caused a rift between her and the Black community.

"With the African American community, I kind of felt like me and Jaden were shunned a little bit," Willow said Tuesday.

She said she felt the message the Black community conveyed to her and her sibling was, "We're not gonna take pride in them because they're too different. They're too weird."

The "Whip My Hair" singer admitted to her mother Jada Pinkett-Smith and grandmother Adrienne Banfield-Norris that she felt that some of her family members didn't embrace her or her brother because they didn't conform.

Willow's comments came in response to her mother revealing that she was "hardcore" mom-shamed by the Black community when she was raising her children. The actress likened mommy shaming to an epidemic.

Detailing the pressure she personally experienced when her children were younger, Jada said it came to a head when Willow, then 11, shaved her head in 2012. "There was a firestorm," she sighed.

Jada said the incessant mom-shaming grew worse after Jaden began defying gender norms by wearing clothes designed for women, such as dresses and high heels.

"When he was wearing a skirt, then he isn't what people consider your 'typical Black man,'" the "Girls Trip" star lamented.

Overall, the actress expressed concern that the Black community keeps trying to "create stereotypes around ourselves," and advocated for parents to allow their children to freely express themselves because, otherwise, "You are doing your kids a disservice."