A New York woman is challenging Miss America, Miss World rules banning
mothers from beauty pageants
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[September 17, 2024]
By PHILIP MARCELO
NEW YORK (AP) — A New York woman is challenging the longstanding rules
of Miss America and Miss World that disqualify mothers from their beauty
pageants.
Danielle Hazel said Monday that she’s always dreamed of entering the
competitions but was devastated to learn that she’s no longer eligible
because she had a son when she was just 19 years old.
“When I told Zion, who is now 6 years old, about these rules he had an
immediate gut reaction: he said that these rules are stupid,” she said,
speaking at the Women’s Rights Pioneers Monument in New York’s Central
Park. “His sense of fairness at only 6 years old tells him that this is
unjust and makes no sense.”
Hazel’s lawyer, Gloria Allred, said a complaint sent Monday to the
city’s Commission on Human Rights seeks an end to the requirements
because they deny and exclude mothers from an “important business and
cultural opportunity” simply because of their status as parents.
“As we stated in Danielle‘s filed complaint, this exclusion is degrading
to Danielle as it is based upon the antiquated stereotype that women
cannot be both a mother and be beautiful, poised, passionate, talented
and philanthropic,” Allred said.
Spokespersons for the Miss America and Miss World pageant organizations
didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment Monday. A
spokesperson for the human rights commission said the agency does not
comment on open investigations.
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Danielle Hazel, left, speaks during a news conference accompanied by
her attorney Gloria Allred, Monday, Sept. 16, 2024, in New York. (AP
Photo/Joe Frederick)
Allred noted that she previously had success challenging a similar rule
for a California mother denied eligibility to compete in the Miss
California pageant, which is part of the Miss Universe and Miss USA
organizations.
The discrimination complaint filed by Andrea Quiroga with the California
Civil Rights Department prompted Miss Universe to eliminate its
70-year-old rule, which was imposed worldwide through its affiliated
organizations, Allred said.
“Being pregnant or being a parent is not a crime and should not exclude
an individual from employment or business opportunities,” Allred said.
“An individual’s status as a parent should not carry a stigma and no
person should have to feel embarrassed, humiliated, or degraded because
they have become a parent.”
The two women were joined Monday by Veronika Didusenko, who was crowned
Miss Ukraine 2018 only to have the title stripped when the Miss World
organization learned that she had a child.
Didusenko, who has since created an organization advocating for an end
to beauty pageant bans on mothers, said she lost her legal challenge in
Ukraine but is seeking relief from the European Court of Human Rights.
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