
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Yityish Aynaw, 21, is the first woman of African descent to win Miss Israel pageant
- She moved to Israel aged 12 after the death of her parents
- Aynaw served in the Israeli army before a friend entered her in the competition
- She met Barack Obama at a state dinner in honor of his first visit to Israel as president
African Voices is a weekly show that highlights Africa’s most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera. Follow the team on Twitter.
(CNN) — At just 21 years old, Yityish Aynaw has gone on a remarkable life journey from a little girl playing barefoot in an Ethiopian village to an Israeli beauty queen who’s ready to shine on the world stage.
Last February, the stunning 21-year-old grabbed international attention after becoming the first woman of African descent to be crowned Miss Israel at the country’s beauty pageant.
“To be first, you have all the attention focused on you and I have to represent my whole ethnic group because through me they see the models,” says Aynaw, who will represent Israel at the next Miss Universe contest. “Through me they see and discover our whole ethnic group.”
Read this: Darfur’s amazing street fashion
Israel’s African-born beauty queen
From orphan to Israeli beauty queen
Historic beauty fights racial prejudice
Aynaw was born in Chahawit, a small village in northern Ethiopia, near the city of Gondar. Her father died when she was young and when she was just 12 years old she lost her mother to a painful illness. Heartbroken, she arrived in Israel with her brother to live with their Ethiopian Jewish grandparents.
“The journey was, I think, what saved me,” she says. “Because I was deeply hurt and I wanted to escape from Ethiopia and forget everything that had happened and get on with it,” she adds. “I wanted to break away from everything and go on.”
While still a child, Aynaw was suddenly faced with a new language, a new culture and all the rest of challenges that come with starting a new life in a foreign country.
Like the estimated 125,000 Ethiopian Jews who have gone in waves over the years to Israel, Aynaw experienced the same struggle to assimilate into her new environment. But Aynaw threw herself at it, not shying away from all that her adopted country expected of her, including mastering Hebrew and serving in the Israeli army after school.
“It is three of the most significant years in my life,” says Aynaw about her time in the military. “There I learned a lot about myself; there I developed,” she adds. “I was a girl of 19 and the army gave me structure.”
Read this: The African beauty empowering women
After finishing her army service, Aynaw started working as a sales clerk in a clothing store. Tall and beautiful, she long had her eye on becoming a model but she never thought about taking part in a pageant. Instead, it was a friend of hers who entered her name into the Miss Israel competition.
“We were always laughing about it,” says Aynaw, who also goes by the nickname Titi. “I’d not registered during the time of my studies because I was really busy — the army is the army, I couldn’t. So when I ended she said to me ‘you have got no more excuses and I am going to register you.’”
I want to give my kids the experience I never had. That is my great dream.
Yityish Aynaw, Miss Israel
Her win in February changed her life instantly. Within a matter of weeks, her name and image were splashed across newspapers and websites, both in Israel and abroad.
The publicity also caught the attention of one of her heroes: Aynaw was invited to an exclusive state dinner for Barack Obama in honor of his first visit to Israel as U.S. president.
“This was an incredible moment,” she says. “He was a figure that I want to emulate. I did a project on him in school and I knew what he had been through and what he had done. He was like a mentor for me, so to meet him and say hello, it was like closing a circle.”
Aynaw says she had never expected something like this would happen to her.
“Suddenly I thought about the little girl who had suffered and the little girl whose only dream was to run and play the whole day. The pain I went through; I saw it all,” she says.
Read this: Designer takes African colors to America’s Deep South
As the first ever black Miss Israel, Aynaw is seen by some as a beacon of hope that racial prejudice is beginning to fade away in the country. Aynaw says that she’s never been the victim of racism but adds that there have been instances where friends of hers have been treated differently because of the color of their skin.
“I am aware of the feeling, even if it did not happen to me,” she says. “I know it [racism] exists in the country and the whole world,” adds Aynaw. “It is something that has to be dispelled.”
A pained little girl who has turned into a strong young woman, Aynaw is now hoping to carve out a successful career in fashion and also serve as a role model for her community.
And although her future seems set to be filled with glamorous days, Aynaw says ultimately her formula for a happy life rests on one thing.
“I have always dreamed of having a big family, a big house and a lot of kids,” she says. “I want to give my kids the experience I never had. That is my great dream.”
Continue reading here:
In February 2013 Ethiopian-born Yiytish Aynaw became the first woman of African descent to be named Miss Israel.

Aynaw, who also goes by the nickname Titi, hopes that her title will help her carve out a successful career in fashion.
But she is also interested in becoming a positive role model for her community.




“To be first, you have all the attention focused on you and I have to represent my whole ethnic group because through me they see the models,” she says. “Through me they see and discover our whole ethnic group.”





This map shows the light from 380,000 years after the Big Bang in our universe, called the cosmic microwave background, detected by the Planck mission with the greatest precision yet.
The Planck mission has given scientists insights into the distribution of matter in the universe. Normal matter, what we are made of, is only a small fraction. Dark matter, which does not interact with light, is in more abundance than we thought, based on Planck data. This map shows areas with more mass as darker and areas with less mass as lighter.
The Planck mission has created a map the oldest light in our universe, called the cosmic microwave background. The results fit well with what we know about the universe and its basic traits, but some unexplained features are observed. One anomaly is that the variations in temperature are not uniform throughout the sky, as shown here.
The three panels show 10-square-degree patches of all-sky maps created by space-based missions capable of detecting the cosmic microwave background. The first spacecraft, launched in 1989, is NASA’s Cosmic Background Explorer, or COBE (left panel). The middle image is from WMAP, launched in 2001, and the far-right image is from Planck, launched in 2009.
This is a map created with data from the COBE mission. The detail has improved significantly since then, as seen in the WMAP and Planck maps.
This all-sky picture of the infant universe was created from nine years of WMAP data. It reveals 13.77 billion-year-old temperature fluctuations (shown as color differences) that correspond to the seeds that grew to become the galaxies. Planck puts the age of the universe as 100 million years older than previous estimates.









A proton-proton collision produced in the Large Hadron Collider shows characteristics in line with the decay of a Higgs boson particle.
Joe Incandela, right, spokesman for the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment, gestures to the crowd next to Rolf Heuer, director-general of the European Organization for Nuclear Research, CERN, at a press conference anouncing the major breakthrough on Wednesday, July 4, in Meyrin, Switzerland.
Attendees at the seminar applaud Wednesday as physicists explain recent findings about a never-before-seen subatomic particle called the Higgs boson.
British physicist Peter Higgs, right, who first proposed the existence of the elusive particle in the 1960s, speaks with Belgian physicist Francois Englert at the press conference at CERN on Wednesday.
CERN’s Globe of Science and Innovation exhibition center and surface buildings, which provide access to the Large Hadron Collider, can be seen near Geneva, Switzerland.
The LHC is a circular tunnel located 100 meters (328 feet) underground, which uses a particle accelerator to collide protons at extreme speeds.
The ATLAS is one of seven experiments run on the LHC.
The particle accelerator magnets of the LHC are shown at the underground test facility at CERN near Geneva.
CERN scientists applaud at the main control center near Geneva during the switch-on operation of the LHC on September 10, 2008.











