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Top model Gisele Bundchen wears part of
the Colcci fall-winter fashion collection during the Fashion Rio 2007, in
Rio de Janeiro, Friday, Jan 19, 2007. The supermodel has entered the
anorexia debate in Brazil, saying the only ones to blame are the families,
not the fashion industry. (File Photo/AP) Photo
Gallery>>> | BEIJING, Jan. 22 --
Supermodel Gisele Bundchen has entered Brazil's growing debate over anorexia,
saying families are to blame -- not the fashion industry.
"I never suffered this problem because I had a very
strong family base," the supermodel told the local Globo newspaper Friday. "The
parents are responsible, not fashion."
The 26-year-old model was in Brazil for the annual
Fashion Rio, a weeklong showcase for some of the country's top designers.
Anorexia became a hot issue in Brazil after the
deaths of four young women last month, including 21-year-old model Ana Carolina Reston.
Splashed across the front pages of newspapers
nationwide, the subject has held morbid fascination for Brazilians, and was even
the theme of a popular TV soap opera. It also sparked a debate within Brazil's
fashion industry.
"Everybody knows the standard for models is to be
thin," Bundchen said. "But you can't generalize and say that all models are
anorexic."
Other countries, too, have begun to address what they
see as the dangerous link between high fashion glamour and an unhealthy image of
women. In September, Madrid's Fashion week banned underweight models. Italy's
designers followed suit in December, requiring models to submit proof that they
do no suffer from an eating disorder.
Bundchen, who left home for a three-month modeling
job in Japan when she was 14, said family support was key to her.
"You leave home, the protection of your parents, but
you still know you have their support," said the Brazilian, who has five
sisters.
(Source: Shenzhen Daily/Agency)
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