"Flat and fierce": Israeli breast cancer survivor celebrates scars
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[October 28, 2020]
By Lianne Back
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Shirtless beneath a
pink blazer, Eylon Nuphar stands scarred and proud as she poses for the
cover of an Israeli women's magazine one month after undergoing a double
mastectomy.
Nuphar, 49, an Israeli performing artist, chose not to have her breasts
reconstructed after the surgery and hopes her cover shoot for Laisha
weekly will inspire other women going through similar trials.
"It's a very personal choice. I guess I'm brave enough to do it and
carry my scars and love them but I am only brave because I know it will
help other women," she said.
Nuphar carries the BRCA gene which is associated with an increased risk
of breast and ovarian cancer. At the age of 33 she was first diagnosed
with breast cancer and went through chemotherapy, a lumpectomy and
radiation.
When the cancer returned 16 years later, Nuphar opted for a double
mastectomy, but decided she would not endure further surgery.
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Eylon Nuphar, an Israeli performing artist who chose not to have her
breasts reconstructed after a double mastectomy, poses for a
photograph during her interview with Reuters in Tel Aviv, Israel
October 21, 2020.REUTERS/Corinna Kern
"This is something women are dealing with all over the world and they
are so afraid of not going through reconstruction so they won't have to
deal with being so different and with the shame of someone looking or
not looking at them, feeling attractive or unattractive," said Nuphar.
"I chose not to do reconstruction, which makes me flat and fierce,"
said Nuphar.
(Reporting by Lianne Back; Writing by Maayan Lubell; Editing by
Jeffrey Heller and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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