Miss Universe Is Breaking Barriers With Its First Openly Gay Contestant
By choosing to come out on such a public stage, she is opening the door for increased inclusivity—while also putting herself at risk. Of course, coming out so publicly wasn’t easy. “This decision was a little bit difficult for me because I’m shy,” she said, recognizing that coming out would increase the public’s interest in her private life.
Zin Htet, whose fans have aptly nicknamed her Superman, didn’t let that stop her, though. After she was crowned Miss Myanmar, she realized it was time to be her whole self—both publicly and privately. “I thought it would help me more than hurt me by coming out as a lesbian and being true to who I am,” she says. Adding, “The LGBTQ community in Myanmar and across the world have been so supportive of me since coming out.”
So, it’s baby steps. In Myanmar, the pageant circuit, and the world as a whole.
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Zin Htet hopes to use her platform to help another at-risk marginalized group: victims of child abuse. “Childhood rape is very common in my country,” she says. “My platform allows me to make sure that the people who are committing these crimes will be punished.”
UNICEF is working with Myanmar to address these issues, training judges and local police officers in how to respond to cases of child sexual abuse. But it’s a country where children are still very vulnerable, and Zin Htet wants to do everything in her power to change that. “I want perpetrators to be punished and for parents to be aware of the problem,” she explained. “But most important, I want to make sure people are more aware of this issue by spreading awareness across social media.”
If Zin Htet is crowned Miss Universe on Sunday, she will certainly be one step closer to achieving that goal. And she’d be making a real splash in the pageant world as the first openly gay winner to be crowned at that level.
Whether or not Miss Universe is ready for that remains to be seen. But crown or no crown, Zin Htet has no regrets about her decision to come out. “I feel like myself now that I’m open about being a lesbian,” she says. “I will work hard for the LGBTQ community to be accepted not only in my country, but across the world.”