Sadie was born with very little pigment in her hair, skin, and eyes. This means she not only has low vision, which makes any child feel massively different. She also looks different. Sadie may be a beautiful little girl, but that doesn't mean she's automatically accepted.
photo of Sadie, from the article linked at the bottom of this post
People with albanism have been judged throughout history for being different. In some areas of the world, there are legends that say their bones are magic. In others, myths say they are spawns of the devil. In my experience, knowing a few of these 'albinos' myself, they are just like anyone else. The only difference is the pigment.
Luckily, children of this upcoming generation are starting to realize that. But how can an entire generation learn this at once?
Elsa from the acclaimed film Frozen has snow white hair. And she is popular. She is talked about constantly. Almost every child I've met in the last three years knoww about her.
Okay, that's great. But why does this help children with albanism? It helps, because Elsa looks different (with her white hair), but she is a fully fleshed out character. She has likes, dislikes, emotions, and fears.
Elsa fears being different.
So when Sadie's mother brought her to her first day of kindergarten, and the little boy behind her in line said, "Hey! You have hair just like Elsa!" it may not be exactly accurate. (Sadie doesn't have magical ice powers of course.) You know what it is though? It's a sign.
That little boy didn't point and say, "Why do you have hair like an old lady?" or "Your hair looks funny!" And none of the parents looked at her and said, "Did you bleach her hair?!" or "Wow! She is blonde!"
No, they looked at her, and they thought of a person. Even if that person isn't Sadie, it's a major step closer than just focusing on how 'weird' her hair is. Her peers will look at her and know her as a character, not white hair.
This is why we need more disabled characters in mainstream media. They take us disabled people from our tools, our unique appearance, or our accommodations to people. Fully fleshed out people with feelings.
So thank you, Disney, for helping a whole group of little boys and girls know that it's okay to have white hair.
Original article
www.bbc.com/news/disability-35967072