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Interview: Linor Abargil

Raped beauty queen finds fulfilment in helping victims

October 7, 2014 14:36
Linor Abargil with the Miss World crown

BySimon Round, Simon Round

4 min read

When Linor Abargil was crowned Miss World in 1998, she burst into tears. Nothing particularly unusual about that - pretty much every beauty contest winner cries. But for the then 18-year-old Israeli, it was different. On a modelling assignment in Milan several weeks previously, she had been brutally raped by the Israeli travel agent who was supposed to be driving her to the airport. Such was the violence involved in the attack on a quiet back road in the middle of the night that Abargil was convinced she would be killed and left by the roadside.

Speaking from Israel ahead of the UK Jewish Film Festival screening of her documentary Brave Miss World - which tells both the story of her trauma and of her subsequent campaign to empower fellow victims - Abargil relives those desperate moments when she fought for her life. The rapist, Uri Shlomo, whom she felt she knew and trusted, drew a knife and raped her repeatedly before attempting to strangle her with a cord. "I was sure that was the end of me that night. Somehow I managed to talk my way out of it. I told him it was a one-night stand and that seemed to calm him down."

She eventually persuaded him drive her to Milan railway station where she made her escape. She took a train to Rome and reported the incident to the police before flying back to Israel. Shlomo was arrested on his return to Israel and was convicted the following year. He remains in jail, although a parole hearing is pending.

So back to the moment when she was announced as Miss World, Abargil was "crying because I suddenly realised what had happened. I wasn't in therapy yet and there was a gagging order [around the case] so nobody knew what had happened to me. It seemed unbelievable that I had gone in such a short time from almost losing my life to winning this competition. It was really crazy - there are such extremes in life."