<p>As an icebreaker, Antonio Wiggins often begins by talking sports.</p>.<p>But the conversations between the Jackson, Mississippi, barber and his customers, African-American men, tend to turn very quickly to more weighty subjects.</p>.<p>Wiggins, who is also Black, caters not only to his patrons' hair but also to their well-being.</p>.<p>He plies his trade at Trendsetters Barber College in Jackson, which is the largest city in the southern state and has a population that is 80 per cent African-American.</p>.<p>Wiggins said he tends to the grooming needs of people from all walks of life.</p>.<p>"Everybody sits in this chair," he said.</p>.<p>"I have a guy who comes that is a doctor. I've got the pastor. We get the drug dealer," Wiggins said. "I cut a guy on a Friday. He went on to kill someone on the Saturday."</p>.<p>Anthony Kelley, who runs Trendsetters, which also serves as a teaching school, said barbers in the American South are "like pillars in our community."</p>.<p>Wiggins and Kelley recently joined "The Confess Project," a coalition of Black barbers seeking to cater to the mental health needs of African-American men in a region of the country scarred by decades of racism.</p>.<p>"We, as barbers, we try to offer them, you know, shoulders to lean on," Kelley said. "A place where they can come to and open up and talk.</p>.<p>"Because, you know, really a lot of people they can't afford to go to a psychiatrist or psychologist," he said.</p>.<p>"In the Black community, there's not a lot of alternatives that we can turn to. So we try to help them," Kelley said.</p>.<p>The barbers meet regularly to discuss best practices and the topic of their latest meeting was suicide prevention.</p>.<p>"A lot of people, during these critical times, start thinking about suicide," Kelley said. "These are some depressing times."</p>.<p>Robert White, 49, awaits his turn in the unpretentious shop where the walls are decorated with pictures and posters, including one advertising a hotline for those suffering from depression.</p>.<p>White said that he has been coming to Trendsetters once a month for years and feels "comfortable."</p>.<p>"We talk about just everything in life," he said. "You don't feel judged.</p>.<p>"Sometimes you just want to be heard."</p>.<p>That is particularly important during a year in which the coronavirus pandemic has exacted a heavy toll on the African-American population, and cost millions of jobs.</p>.<p>Two customers of Darius Campbell, a Black barber in the town of Terry, south of Jackson, have lost five members of their family to Covid-19 while others are having a hard time making ends meet.</p>.<p>"The main thing that I see, the worst, is struggling to pay bills," Campbell said.</p>.<p>"I deal with a lot of family men," he said.</p>.<p>Their biggest fear?</p>.<p>"Can I take care of my family tomorrow?" he said. "Are they going to come take my house from me in three, four, five, six months?"</p>.<p>Another frequent topic of discussion is police brutality against the African-American community, which came to a head in the United States in May with the killing of George Floyd by a white police officer in Minneapolis.</p>.<p>"We know people who've been brutalized by police," Wiggins said. "We are in Mississippi so we are so used to racism."</p>.<p>With the November 3 presidential election on the horizon, talk has also turned to politics, said James Bennett, a 34-year-old municipal worker who gets his hair cut by Wiggins every Saturday.</p>.<p>"It's one of the key subjects," Bennett said. "You can join the conversation anytime you want."</p>.<p>Campbell said his customers are in agreement on one thing -- "we need to get (Donald Trump) out of office."</p>.<p>Wiggins said the Republican president lacks "integrity" and is insensitive to the problems of Black Americans.</p>.<p>"We're looking for someone showing love to us because we feel so unloved," he said.</p>.<p>Wiggins said he was encouraging young patrons to register to vote.</p>.<p>He said he'll cast his ballot on November 3 even if Trump is expected to easily beat Democrat Joe Biden in Mississippi, a Republican stronghold.</p>.<p>So will Robert White and he said he'll be back in the barber's chair to discuss the results.</p>
<p>As an icebreaker, Antonio Wiggins often begins by talking sports.</p>.<p>But the conversations between the Jackson, Mississippi, barber and his customers, African-American men, tend to turn very quickly to more weighty subjects.</p>.<p>Wiggins, who is also Black, caters not only to his patrons' hair but also to their well-being.</p>.<p>He plies his trade at Trendsetters Barber College in Jackson, which is the largest city in the southern state and has a population that is 80 per cent African-American.</p>.<p>Wiggins said he tends to the grooming needs of people from all walks of life.</p>.<p>"Everybody sits in this chair," he said.</p>.<p>"I have a guy who comes that is a doctor. I've got the pastor. We get the drug dealer," Wiggins said. "I cut a guy on a Friday. He went on to kill someone on the Saturday."</p>.<p>Anthony Kelley, who runs Trendsetters, which also serves as a teaching school, said barbers in the American South are "like pillars in our community."</p>.<p>Wiggins and Kelley recently joined "The Confess Project," a coalition of Black barbers seeking to cater to the mental health needs of African-American men in a region of the country scarred by decades of racism.</p>.<p>"We, as barbers, we try to offer them, you know, shoulders to lean on," Kelley said. "A place where they can come to and open up and talk.</p>.<p>"Because, you know, really a lot of people they can't afford to go to a psychiatrist or psychologist," he said.</p>.<p>"In the Black community, there's not a lot of alternatives that we can turn to. So we try to help them," Kelley said.</p>.<p>The barbers meet regularly to discuss best practices and the topic of their latest meeting was suicide prevention.</p>.<p>"A lot of people, during these critical times, start thinking about suicide," Kelley said. "These are some depressing times."</p>.<p>Robert White, 49, awaits his turn in the unpretentious shop where the walls are decorated with pictures and posters, including one advertising a hotline for those suffering from depression.</p>.<p>White said that he has been coming to Trendsetters once a month for years and feels "comfortable."</p>.<p>"We talk about just everything in life," he said. "You don't feel judged.</p>.<p>"Sometimes you just want to be heard."</p>.<p>That is particularly important during a year in which the coronavirus pandemic has exacted a heavy toll on the African-American population, and cost millions of jobs.</p>.<p>Two customers of Darius Campbell, a Black barber in the town of Terry, south of Jackson, have lost five members of their family to Covid-19 while others are having a hard time making ends meet.</p>.<p>"The main thing that I see, the worst, is struggling to pay bills," Campbell said.</p>.<p>"I deal with a lot of family men," he said.</p>.<p>Their biggest fear?</p>.<p>"Can I take care of my family tomorrow?" he said. "Are they going to come take my house from me in three, four, five, six months?"</p>.<p>Another frequent topic of discussion is police brutality against the African-American community, which came to a head in the United States in May with the killing of George Floyd by a white police officer in Minneapolis.</p>.<p>"We know people who've been brutalized by police," Wiggins said. "We are in Mississippi so we are so used to racism."</p>.<p>With the November 3 presidential election on the horizon, talk has also turned to politics, said James Bennett, a 34-year-old municipal worker who gets his hair cut by Wiggins every Saturday.</p>.<p>"It's one of the key subjects," Bennett said. "You can join the conversation anytime you want."</p>.<p>Campbell said his customers are in agreement on one thing -- "we need to get (Donald Trump) out of office."</p>.<p>Wiggins said the Republican president lacks "integrity" and is insensitive to the problems of Black Americans.</p>.<p>"We're looking for someone showing love to us because we feel so unloved," he said.</p>.<p>Wiggins said he was encouraging young patrons to register to vote.</p>.<p>He said he'll cast his ballot on November 3 even if Trump is expected to easily beat Democrat Joe Biden in Mississippi, a Republican stronghold.</p>.<p>So will Robert White and he said he'll be back in the barber's chair to discuss the results.</p>