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- Shindana_Toys abstract "Shindana Toys, a division of Operation Bootstrap, Inc., was a South Central Los Angeles, California cooperative toy company formed in 1968, one of many Operation Bootstrap initiatives undertaken following the 1965 Watts Riots. Company proceeds supported businesses in the Watts area. Shindana (a Swahili word roughly meaning \"to compete\") Toys was community-owned and founded by Louis S. Smith, II and Robert Hall. The latter was the company's first CEO and President; though he was succeeded in both posts by Smith. The Chase Manhattan Bank, the Mattel Toy Company, Sears Roebuck & Co., and Equitable Life Assurance helped finance portions of the Shindana Toys operations.Shindana Toys was historically significant for being one of the first toy companies (if not the first) to market ethnically-correct black dolls. A goal of the company was to raise Black consciousness and improve self-image. In a 1970s Los Angeles Associated Press article, company president, Louis Smith said, \"We believe that only by learning to love oneself can one learn to love others...Shindana believes that by marketing black dolls and games that both black and white children can learn to relate to at an early age, the company can foster the spirit of what Shindana is all about, love.\"From a shop on Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, California, Doris Conner—an African American, entrepreneurial businesswoman—along with her daughters, Lynne and Tuesday Conner, created, designed, and manufactured many of the clothes worn by Shindana Dolls. They also manufactured the Flip Wilson doll.While the first doll created by Shindana Toys was named \"Baby Nancy,\" many later Shindana Toys dolls featured ethnically correct names, including names that were Swahili in origin. Operation Bootstrap contracted with Mattel Toymakers to create a talking voice unit, just like the one invented for Chatty Cathy in 1960, for their doll Tamu in 1971. The popular Talking Tamu (Swahili for \"sweet\") doll was designed to say the following 11 phrases when you pulled her \"talking ring\": My name is Tamu. Cool it, baby. Do you like my dress? Hold me tight. I'm sleepy. Can you dig it? Let's play house. I love you. Tamu means 'sweet'. I'm hungry. I'm proud, like you.Tamu was featured in the Sears Roebuck, JC Penney, and Montgomery Wards Christmas catalogs, and available in most stores where ever toys were sold.".
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageExternalLink BootstrapGallery.pdf.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageExternalLink OperationBootstrap.pdf.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageID "7035869".
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageLength "5596".
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageOutDegree "29".
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageRevisionID "704476089".
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink AXA_Equitable_Life_Insurance_Company.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Black_doll.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Category:Companies_based_in_Los_Angeles_County,_California.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Category:Companies_established_in_1968.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Category:Game_manufacturers.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Category:Toy_companies_of_the_United_States.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Chase_(bank).
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Cooperative.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Diana_Ross.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Doris_Conner.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink File:ShindanaToysLogo.jpg.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Flip_Wilson.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Jimmie_Walker.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Julius_Erving.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Louis_S._Smith,_II.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Marla_Gibbs.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Mattel.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Jackson.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink O._J._Simpson.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Operation_Bootstrap,_Inc..
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Pullstring.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Redd_Foxx.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Hall.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Sears.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink South_Los_Angeles.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Swahili_language.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink The_Philadelphia_Inquirer.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Toy.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLink Watts_riots.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shindana Toys".
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clarify.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:More_footnotes.
- Shindana_Toys wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Which.
- Shindana_Toys subject Category:Companies_based_in_Los_Angeles_County,_California.
- Shindana_Toys subject Category:Companies_established_in_1968.
- Shindana_Toys subject Category:Game_manufacturers.
- Shindana_Toys subject Category:Toy_companies_of_the_United_States.
- Shindana_Toys type Company.
- Shindana_Toys type Company.
- Shindana_Toys type Establishment.
- Shindana_Toys comment "Shindana Toys, a division of Operation Bootstrap, Inc., was a South Central Los Angeles, California cooperative toy company formed in 1968, one of many Operation Bootstrap initiatives undertaken following the 1965 Watts Riots. Company proceeds supported businesses in the Watts area. Shindana (a Swahili word roughly meaning \"to compete\") Toys was community-owned and founded by Louis S. Smith, II and Robert Hall.".
- Shindana_Toys label "Shindana Toys".
- Shindana_Toys sameAs Q7497288.
- Shindana_Toys sameAs m.0h1cnv.
- Shindana_Toys sameAs Q7497288.
- Shindana_Toys wasDerivedFrom Shindana_Toys?oldid=704476089.
- Shindana_Toys isPrimaryTopicOf Shindana_Toys.