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Friday, May 17, 2013

Miss Israel


Miss Israel
(When I was in Ethiopia recently, I was surprised to learn about Ethiopian Jews who had settled
in Israel.  The new Miss Israel represents them beautifully.  Hat tip to Forrest for sharing this).





President Obama Meets with First-Ever
Ethiopian Crowned Miss Israel.


Israel is putting its best face forward
for President Obama, and what better face to put forward for America’s first
black president than Israel’s first black beauty queen?


The newly crowned
Miss Israel is an Ethiopian Jewish immigrant to Israel.
She is joining Obama Thursday for the
official state dinner in Jerusalem.


Ethiopian immigrants have struggled to
integrate into Israeli society, but Obama will be getting a taste of some of
their recent success stories.


A few weeks ago, more than a quarter of all Israeli TV viewers watched the judges announce the new Miss Israel of2013.


Titi is her name, short for Yityish Aynaw.


She was the only black finalist in this year’s beauty pageant and she
has become Israel’s first black beauty queen. She’s tall, commanding, and
outspoken.


“It’s time that someone from my
community, someone with my skin color, who is Israeli just like everyone
else, represent the country,” Aynaw said.


What captivated the judges was not only her beauty, but also her life story.
Born in a small town, Titi was orphaned
by the time she was about 10. She moved to Israel to live with her
grandparents, who had already left Ethiopia for a new life here.
Titi said as an Ethiopian Jew, she grew up with stories about the Land of Milk and Honey, but her new life in Israel
wasn’t all milk and honey.
Titi hardly remembered her grandparents.
She was sent to an Israeli boarding school without knowing a word of Hebrew.

Some of her classmates made fun of her Ethiopian name,
Yitayish.
“What is ‘Yitayish?’ This is my name.
but it sounds weird,” she says. “There were times they’d call me ‘Tayish.’ In
Hebrew that’s a kind of animal. You know?”
But she was proud of her Ethiopian
heritage, and unlike many other Ethiopian Jewish immigrants who took on
Hebrew names, she kept her own.

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