Mia le Roux is the first deaf person to win Miss South Africa
Mia le Roux has become the first deaf woman to be chosen as Miss South Africa following a different competition that withdrew one person who ended up withdrawing after being robbed of her Nigerian origins.
In her acceptance speech, Ms. Le Roux said she hopes that her victory will help those who feel marginalized to achieve their “unusual dreams like mine”.
He said he wants to help those who are “left out financially or differently abled”.
Last week, 23-year-old law student Chidimma Adetschina withdrew from the competition following allegations that her mother may have stolen the information of a South African woman.
Ms. Adetschina was born in South Africa to a Nigerian father and a Mozambican mother.
He had been on social media for a few weeks, with many people, including a Cabinet minister, questioning his right to represent the country.
He said he had been a victim of ‘black-on-black hatred,’ highlighting a form of xenophobia in South Africa known as “afrophobia”, directed at those from other African countries.
Ms Le Roux, 28, was diagnosed with hearing loss at the age of one and was fitted with a cochlear implant to enable her to hear sound.
He said it took two years of speech therapy before he was able to say his first words.
After winning, the actress and marketing executive said: “I’m a proud deaf South African woman and I know what it’s like to be left out.
“I know now that I was put on this earth to break boundaries and I did it tonight.”
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