Sveta Ugolek “Coal”

is a professional model

with burns on 45% of her body.

At the age of 18,

she was included

on the list of the most inspiring

and influential women in the world.

“I remember very well how I got burned.
My mother often went on drinking

and did not pay for the electricity,

we’d have candles everywhere

at home.
I just wanted to remove

a little thread

sticking out of my dress

and lit it with a candle.

The dress burst into flames

entirely and instantly.
It was made of cheap synthetic fabric

that melted and stuck

like glue to my body.

There was no one in the house,

I was locked in.
For half an hour I ran around and fell,

trying to extinguish the fire myself.
When my mother returned,

she noticed me from the doorway.

She burst into tears

and tried to tear off the pieces

of burnt fabric along with my skin.

In the ambulance,

they gave me some kind

of injection in the chest,

I lost consciousness and woke up

in the hospital two months later –

all that time I was in a coma.
My mother never visited me.

My father died in 2001.

He worked in construction.
Once there was a fire and

he helped save two people.

He went in for the third

and never came back.

I was one year old when it happened,

so I only know the story

from my mother’s memories.

She loved him very much

and wasn’t able

to recover after his death.

She stopped looking for work,

lived off my pension,

started drinking vodka,

and then moved on to ethyl alcohol.

The attempts to kill me started suddenly, soon after my recovery.

Once, she washed my hair

and held my head under the water,

but then she slipped on the wet floor

and I was able to escape.

Another time, she threw a fish knife

at me – the blade shattered two teeth, scratched my cheek,

and got stuck in my mouth.

Blood splattered everywhere

as I ran out into the street,

but I don’t remember what happened next. I must have passed out.

After one too many such incidents,

I went to the police.

The Juvenile Commission started collecting evidence to deprive my mother of her parental rights.

I was temporarily sent to an orphanage.

Sadly, it wasn’t as easy

as I thought it would be to get away

from her.

I was repeatedly told that there was “insufficient evidence presented”

to close my case.

I started thinking that maybe

if I was killed then I would be taken seriously by the authorities.

This nightmare lasted for more than three years

until December 2012

when the court finally decided

that I could stay at the orphanage.

During my ordeal with my mother,

I asked her once: “Why did you try

to keep my head under the water?

“She simply said, “because you had lice.”; “Why did you cut me three times?”

to which she answered,

“because you steal.”

I really did steal, but it was in order to survive.

I wanted to get rid of my scars,

have plastic surgery,

and live like everyone else.

It’s hard to be under people’s scrutiny, looked at with fear and repulsion,

hearing the whispers all time around you.

All the kids in the neighborhood hated me. Later, at the orphanage,

I wasn’t accepted into the main circle.
They called me names “burner”, “burnt” and hit me.

When I was 16, the bullying ended.

I made my first friends,

and they came up with the nickname Ugolek “Coal”, which I ended up keeping.

It’s self-deprecating

but at that time it seemed like a better choice than bearing my mother’s surname.
Komsomolsk-on-Amur is a small,

harsh city,

that I always wanted to leave behind.
There you cannot hide from your past…

After I left the orphanage,

I had nowhere to go

but return to the life from which I fled.

Washing in the same bathtub

where I was almost drowned,

drinking tea in the kitchen

where my mom cut me,

walking down the street where I dragged my drunk mother home,

crossing the road where I was raped…

I ran away from the orphanage several times,

but every time they found me

and brought me back.

I started uploading documentary videos on the Internet in which I talked

about my life and about the difficult circumstances of other children

at the orphanage.

At the age of 18, I was finally released

and went to Moscow where I felt I could live differently,

just the way I wanted.
Since I was a child, I wanted to be a model, but I was told

that with my burns I would never be allowed on the runway.

I said, NO.

It is only in Komsomolsk

that people are limited,

but somewhere else

my appearance could be in demand.

I created an account on Instagram and uploaded my unfiltered stories

and photos.

After I got my first 10,000 followers,

other girls in similar situations from all over Russia started to contact me.

They admired me,

asked how I could not be afraid to show myself;

they were still at that stage when they hide their scars and cannot accept themselves.
I can’t answer every one,

but I try to send at least a smile.

I started sending out many applications until I found one girl who not only

agreed to take pictures of me for free

but also paid for the studio

for my first photoshoot.

We discussed so many ideas and made this first shooting come to life.

The photoshoot spread instantly

across the World Wide Web.

My dream came true,

I became one of the most popular models in Russia and started getting job propositions from big magazines,

participating in creative projects with talented people from all over the world.

During this time, I met my true love. Initially, I was surprised

by his ability to see me as perfect and beautiful in everything,

but later, working with psychotherapists and psychologists,

who helped me overcome the consequences of childhood trauma

I finally accepted myself fully,

just the way I am.”

2018 turned out to be quite epic for Sveta as her name was included in the BBC 100 Women –

the list which is comprised of the most inspiring and influential women in the world.

Her experience is definitely inspiring

for so many people,

especially for those

who need to start life anew as she tried several times, and ultimately succeeded.

Eventually, Sveta moved her mother to Moscow.

She decided that hate had no part

in her life,

and in order to heal she chose to forgive.

“For 18 years I seemed to have lived

in a different world,

now I’m starting over.

I’m not quite used to it yet.

What will happen next – we’ll see”.