by
Arnaud Bouvier
Mon Oct 22, 1:11 AM ET
HANOVER, Germany (AFP) - They're young, beautiful, poised and ambitious
-- and confined to wheelchairs. Meet the new stars of the catwalk,
at a modelling competition for the disabled.
Ten young women from across Europe
joined the competition in the northern German city of Hanover this
month.
In smart casual togs or long evening
dresses in brilliant colours, Milena of Macedonia, Gerardina of
Italy and Germany's Ines relished the limelight as hundreds of spectators
looked on and a professional jury sized them up.
Each of the women was aiming to
see her face splashed across a magazine cover or featured in a television
commercial.
"It's possible!" said
Jelena Zdravkovic, 23, a pretty blonde Serb competitor.
"But there is still a lot
to do to fight prejudice because people often do not think that
beauty and a disability can go together."
The young psychology student, who
is enrolled at a German university and has suffered from muscular
dystrophy since birth, was the first winner of the "International
Beauties in Motion" competition.
Each of the women rolled their
wheelchairs down the catwalk with precisely choreographed moves
set to the music of Madonna and Prince. The 10 candidates were handpicked
from more than 200 applicants dreaming of a chance in the fashion
world.
"These women do not want pity.
They are models like any other. And they are quite simply sexy,"
said American jury member Bruce Darnell, known in Germany for his
part in supermodel Heidi Klum's reality television show "Germany's
Next Top Model".
Between make-up applications, contestants
admit they find the whole experience rather amusing -- particularly
posing with animals for a wall calendar, with or without their wheelchairs.
"I love getting up on stage,
performing," said an Austrian of Zambian origin, Khelesiya
Erdkoenig.
"But nothing is easy: we always
have to fight to show we can do the same thing as the 'pedestrians'
(people who are not disabled)"," said Erdkoenig, a petite,
dynamic professional singer who has been handicapped since the age
of two.
The clothes on display have all
the style and elegance of a top-level fashion show.
"They are nothing special,
I could have designed them for women who are not disabled,"
designer and jury member Mira Koetters said.
"There is one difference however
-- the disabled have more difficulty putting on some of the skintight
dresses."
An organiser of the event, Renate
Weidner of the disabled rights group Partizip, said that the biggest
challenge facing the models was bias.
"The United States and England
are far ahead in this area -- there you see handicapped people in
television commercials and they can make a living in this field.
Here it is still impossible," she said.
Nina Wortmann, a German who took
part in a similar contest in 2004, one year after the accident that
left her a paraplegic, said the models offered a healthy lesson
in positive body image and self-esteem for those still dealing with
the shock of a sudden disability.
"What counts in this business
is being motivated, not slumping down in the wheelchair, and keeping
your head held high," said Wortmann, who was part of the jury.
"Just think of all the non-disabled
people who walk down the street closed to the world with their eyes
lowered to the ground?"
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