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- Miss World 2014: How my African heritage helped me win
Thursday, 18 December 2014
She beat
120 international contestants each deemed to be not only the most
beautiful in their home countries, but the best example of what it means
to be a modern woman.
So, who is Rolene Strauss - aka Miss World 2014 - and is she really one of the world's most eligible women?
This
year's crop which made it to the final in London - the city where the
competition started 63 years ago - far from being the stereotypical
'dumb beauty queens', were pretty and polished.
Scroll down for video
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Winning: South African Rolene Strauss,
22, was last night crowned Miss World 2014 in a glittering ceremony in
London. So who is Rolene and what was it that ensured she cinched the
crown?
The majority hold a university degree, as well as juggling a vast array of interests, hobbies and charity work.
Miss
Strauss - whose first runner up was Miss Hungary, Edina Kulcsar, and
second runner up was Miss United States, Elizabeth Safrit - is the
perfect example of that.
Miss
South Africa, 22-year-old Rolene Strauss, was crowned Miss World 2014 at
the contest's glitzy final in London on Sunday, with an estimated
billion viewers watching on TV around the globe.
Medical
student Strauss clasped her hands together in surprise and was crowned
by the outgoing Miss World, Megan Young of the Philippines, to huge
cheers in the ExCeL exhibition centre.
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Talented: Medical student Strauss was
crowned by the outgoing Miss World, Megan Young of the Philippines, to
huge cheers in the ExCeL exhibition centre
She
pipped her fellow contestants to clinch first place in an action-packed
three weeks that included a sports, top model and beach fashion
competition, a talent contest, Beauty With A Purpose round and a debate
at the Oxford Union.
Rolene's principle passion is medicine. The beauty queen is a fourth year medical student and science is clearly in her blood.
Her
parents are a doctor and nurse, and in a pre-taped interview for the
pageant, Rolene said that becoming Miss South Africa and Miss World and
studying medicine were her 'childhood dreams'.
'Everyone
in my town called me Little Dr Strauss,' she said. 'Because I was
always the little curly-headed girl running around behind my dad in the
hospital.
'I'm a test tube baby and I believe my passion for health was born with me,' she added.
As well as being a medical student, Rolene is bilingual and speaks fluent English, as well as Afrikaans.
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Celebrations: As well as being a
medical student, Rolene is bilingual. She speaks fluent English, as well
as Afrikaans and says she has always dreamed of being Miss World and a
doctor
Writing
on her website, she explains that she's always had 'big dreams'. She
said: 'We moved to a small town called Volksrust, in Mpumalanga. Ever
since then I was a small town girl with big dreams.
'To
be the best me, to follow my destiny and someday be a woman who uses
what she was given out of grace; to inspire, to love, to sympathize and
to give.'
Obviously
religious, she adds: 'The following verse never fails to give me goose
bumps: “For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord. “They are
plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.” –
Jeremiah 29:11. We all have a future of hope, a destiny planned for
each as individual. The choices we make are the turns we take on the
road to our destinies.'
Paying
tribute to her country after being crowned, she said: 'South Africa
this is for you. I think I will brace myself for what's about to happen.
It's a huge responsibility.'
Rolene
is determined to use her new crown for the good of the community. She
told AFP she wanted to help spread education in her homeland and thereby
help other people realise their dreams.
'I
am what I am today because of the opportunities I have received and I
would love to give others the same opportunities; educating, the
opportunity to be educated, to make healthy choices and also to live
their dreams.'
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Top three: Miss Hungary, Edina
Kulcsar, left, was judged the runner-up and Miss United States,
Elizabeth Safrit, came third in the 64th annual competition, contested
by women from 121 countries
And she was already getting used to the glittering crown.
'I'll
definitely keep it on as long as I can but my parents are staying
around here so they'll be hugging me and I'm afraid that it might fall
off,' she said.
There's
good news for all the men out there; Miss Strauss is single. In a
recent interview with the South African TV Authority, she was asked how
many boyfriends she'd ever dumped.
She
replied: 'I would say three.' When asked about her relationship status,
she said: 'I definitely don't have a public relationship.
'You
know, as a Miss South Africa people look up to you and see you as an
independent, strong woman. That's the picture I'd like to show people
out there and I think it's difficult to be in a relationship because of
your busy schedule.'
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Tough competition: Sunday's show
started with a spectacular choreographed dance routine, with all the
beauty queens on stage in costumes inspired by their homelands and they
had to compete in several rounds to win the crown
Miss
Hungary, Edina Kulcsar, was judged the runner-up and Miss United
States, Elizabeth Safrit, came third in the 64th annual competition,
contested by women from 121 countries.
This
year's event has been rocked by the murder of Miss Honduras,
19-year-old Maria Jose Alvarado, who was shot dead along with her sister
last month.
Police in Honduras accuse her sister's boyfriend of shooting them after seeing his partner dancing with another man at a party.
Strauss
and other contestants will travel to the crime-plagued central American
nation to build a school named in the sisters' honour.
'We
hope that it will really start to impress on the people in Honduras
that the violence, and hurting people like those two innocent women...
maybe they can think again before they take a gun,' Miss World
chairwoman Julia Morley told AFP.
Sunday's
show started with a spectacular choreographed dance routine, with all
the beauty queens on stage in costumes inspired by their homelands -
including Miss Bolivia in a colourful feathered headdress.
While
beauty remains central to the event, the women taking part are chiefly
judged on their talents and involvement in good causes.
Miss World began in 1951, a year before its chief rival Miss Universe.
Strauss is the third South African Miss World, the country having held the title in 1958 and 1974.
Venezuela tops the all-time leader board with six titles, ahead of India and the United Kingdom on five titles each.
Julia
Morley, Miss World Chairman, said: 'It was great to bring the 64th Miss
World Final back to London and where it all began 63 years ago.
'I’m
looking forward to travelling with Rolene, the new Miss World, to visit
countries around the globe to support this year’s finalists Beauty with
a Purpose fundraising projects.'
Good genes: Her parents are a doctor
and nurse and in a pre-taped interview for the pageant, she said that
becoming Miss South Africa and Miss World and studying medicine were her
'childhood dreams'