Lais Ribeiro
Birth Name: Lais Pereira de Oliveira
Place of Birth: Miguel Alves, Piauí, Brazil
Date of Birth: 5 October, 1989
Ethnicity: Brazilian [African, Indigenous, Portuguese]
Lais Ribeiro is a Brazilian model. She has been a Victoria’s Secret Angel. She is 6′0″.
She is the daughter of Maria do Socorro Carvalho Pereira and José Ribeiro de Oliveira Filho. Lais is married to American professional basketball player Joakim Noah. She has a son.
A picture of Lais with her mother can be seen here. A picture of Lais’ brother can be seen here. A picture of her maternal grandparents can be seen here.
When Lais was asked, “Have you struggled in the fashion market for being black?,” she stated:
Here in Brazil, people are more tolerant, but the companies out there (outside of Brazil) are afraid to put a black woman on the cover because, on magazine stands, we compete for sales with little blond girls. It’s complicated.
She is also described as having Indigenous ancestry.
Lais’ paternal grandfather is José Ribeiro de Oliveira (the son of José Mendes Ribeiro and Rozina de Oliveira).
Lais’ paternal grandmother is Odéte Maria de Brito (the daughter of Cândido Brito and Antonina Cesarina da Silva). Odéte’s race is listed as “morena.” Cândido was the son of José Faustino Pereira de Brito and Joaquina Rosa de Santana. Antonina was the daughter of Clarismundo Gonçalves da Silva and Luisa Maria da Silva.
Lais’ maternal grandfather is Raimundo Pereira Filho (the son of Raimundo Pereira Lima and Matilda Pereira Lima).
Lais’ maternal grandmother is Ortizia Maria de Carvalho (the daughter of Gentil Pessóa de Carvalho and Maria da Conceição de Sousa). Gentil was the son of Prudente Rodrigues de Carvalho and Ortizia Maria dos Anjos. Gentil’s race on his death certificate is listed as “white.” Lais’ great-grandmother Maria was the daughter of Inácio Gaia de Sousa and Raimunda Maria da Conceição.
Sources: Birth record of Lais Ribeiro – https://www.familysearch.org
Marriage record of Lais’ parents – https://www.familysearch.org
Birth record of Lais’ father – https://www.familysearch.org
Civil registration record of Lai’s paternal grandmother, Odéte Maria de Brito – https://www.familysearch.org
Marriage record of Lais’ maternal grandparents, Raimundo Pereira Filho and Ortizia Maria de Carvalho – https://www.familysearch.org
Death record of Lais’ maternal great-grandfather, Gentil Pessóa de Carvalho – https://www.familysearch.org
Shes afro latina(tri racial). A pic of her childhood
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/07/16/14/2A8FD41500000578-3163874-image-a-7_1437054809390.jpg
She got natural straight hair.
As a child she’s look mostly amerindian
Afro latina isn’t equivalent to being triracial. There are true Afro Latinos that only have African Ancestry. Do you call white Latinos, Euro-Latinos? No, because it sounds stupid. Americans always have to attach their damn prefixes to everything.
@Multi
Quote( Americans always have to attach their damn prefixes to everything.)
Actually if you pay attention to those said Latinos, you would find out that they are attaching that prefix themselves. They say it over and over that they are getting reacquainted with their African heritage. That they prefer that term, becausae when they look in the mirror, they don’t see a Spaniard
Brazilians are mixed europeans with amerindians and africans. lol
Lais’ great-grandmother Maria was the daughter of Inácio Gaia de Sousa and Raimunda Maria da Conceição.
Minor corrections:
Candido -> Cândido
Jose -> José
Lais’ maternal grandfather’s full name is Raimundo Pereira Filho
Lais’ maternal grandmother’s full name is Ortizia Maria de Carvalho
I have found her birth record. Her birth name is Lais Pereira de Ribeiro, and was born on October 5, 1989, not October 5, 1990.
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QLW6-VMJ1
…and was actually born in Teresina (not Miguel Alves although her birth was registered there), Piauí, Brazil
It’s interesting that in this quote
Quote(Here in Brazil, people are more tolerant, but the companies out there (outside of Brazil) are afraid to put a black woman on the cover because, on magazine stands, we compete for sales with little blond girls. It’s complicated.)
She used the word tolerant, that’s a funny word to use. To me, Brazil doesn’t seem to be all that tolerant. I mean when you take a black goddess and turn her white:
https://blackwomenofbrazil.co/2014/12/14/again-clothing-store-is-target-of-criticism-after-using-white-model-to-represent-the-african-goddess-iemanja/
Where’s the tolerants in that?