U.S. president Barack Obama has extended an invitation to Yityish
Aynaw, the first black Miss Israel, to attend a state dinner hosted at
Israeli president Shimon Peres’ home, reports the Guardian. It’s only
three weeks since the 21-year-old Ethiopian-Israeli was announced winner
of the beauty pageant that has run uninterrupted for 63 years.
Now Aynaw can look forward to dining alongside the country’s
dignitaries and an American president she considers one of her role
models. “I was influenced and inspired by Obama,” she told the BBC.
“Like him, I was also raised by my grandmother… and I also had to work
very hard and long to achieve things in my life. To this day he inspires
me just as he inspires the rest of the world.” According to Aynaw she
has more in common with the U.S. president than one would imagine; “I’m
the first black Miss Israel to be chosen and [Obama] is the first black
American president. These go together,” she told the Jerusalem Post.
Aynaw was born in the town of Gondar in northwest Ethiopia. When she
was one year old her father died, and ten years later, after her mother
died, she was sent to live with her maternal grandparents who had
immigrated to Israel. Growing up she heard stories of Israel — the land
of “milk and honey” — but life in a new country, learning a new
language, was a huge challenge for the 12-year-old. “It wasn’t easy
because I couldn’t speak the language and I was put into a regular class
without any help,” Aynaw told the BBC.
During the 2013 Miss Israel competition Aynaw told the judges that
the time had come for a black woman to wear the crown. “It’s important
that a member of the Ethiopian community win the competition for the
first time,” she told the panel. “There are many different communities
of many different colors in Israel, and it’s important to show that to
the world,” writes the Guardian.
She also decided to take part in the competition using her real
Ethiopian name. When the Miss Israel contest first began some
contestants chose to use “pure” Hebrew names over their ethic
identities, notes Tablet Magazine, whereas Aynaw was determined to use
her birth name. “I was born sick, but my mom believed I had a future,”
she says. Yitayish is Amharic for “look,” or as Aynaw explains it,
“looking toward the future.”
There are an estimated 120,000 Ethiopian Jews in Israel, and they
frequently complain of being discriminated against, reports the BBC.
Indeed, some have reportedly taken to calling her “toffee queen,”
instead of yoffee (Hebrew for beauty) queen. Nevertheless, Semai Elias, a
spiritual leader in the Ethiopian Jewish community, is optimistic that
Israeli people will come around. “There is hope that Israeli society has
gotten a little bit more open,” he told Tablet Magazine. [BBC]
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