Let's recall last year when a young beautiful Nigerian lady was attached with acid in London by another Nigerian lady of 21....to the glory of God, her beauty is gradually being restored...thanks to science.
See details plus photos below:
'What I loved about the treatment was its intricacy – it is a form of cosmetic tattooing. It is the closest you can get to mimicking the appearance of the original brow.
I did get a bit emotional when I saw them. It’s the first time I have seen myself with eyebrows for almost a year.'
See details plus photos below:
Naomi Oni, 21, had acid hurled over her
face, head and body as she made her way home to Dagenham after her shift at
Westfield's Victoria's Secret store last December.
The acid burned off the skin on her
face and scalp and left her temporarily blinded. She lost her eyelids, eyebrows
and some of her hair in the assault.
Since then, surgeons have painstakingly
rebuilt her features including taking skin from the back of her ear to make new
eyelids for her. But her eyebrows remained permanently damaged.
Now, ten months on, her skin has healed
enough for her to have her eyebrows restored.
Naomi had a sophisticated
semi-permanent make-up treatment that tattoos on the eyebrows as individual
hairs, mimicking the effect of real brows.
She said:
'It has been very difficult to come to terms with.My doctors
have been brilliant but it will take years of laser surgery to repair my
face.There is only so much you can do at any one time – then there is long
healing process before you can undergo the next stage of the treatment.It is
only now that I had been able to have semi-permanent make-up on my face.'I
loved having the treatment – it feels so good to have my eyebrows back.
'What I loved about the treatment was its intricacy – it is a form of cosmetic tattooing. It is the closest you can get to mimicking the appearance of the original brow.
I did get a bit emotional when I saw them. It’s the first time I have seen myself with eyebrows for almost a year.'
Naomi, from London, is still at a loss
to explain why she was targeted.
She said:
'I asked, "why me?" I work hard, I’m a good
person.I’m the same person now but stronger.I want to say to my attacker,
"You can burn my skin but you can’t burn my soul."'
Naomi was on the phone to her boyfriend
after returning from work when she was attacked in
Dagenham, Essex, on December 30 last
year.
She said:
'I felt a splash – that’s when I thought, someone’s
out to kill me.I just started running straight home. I knew it was acid. It
feels like something is eating way at your skin. I felt it most on my scalp,
more than my face.'
She arrived at her home shouting and
banging on the door, screaming ‘acid, acid.’
Her family came to the door thinking she
was excited about something.
Then when her mother opened the door,
Naomi said everyone’s faces ‘just dropped.’
Naomi is on leave from her job at
Victoria's Secret lingerie store at Westfield shopping centre in Stratford,
East London, while she recovers.
She eventually plans to return to work
and pursue her dream of becoming a make-up artist.Naomi was last night honoured
for her bravery with a prize at the Inspiration for Women Awards at Cadogan
Hall in Chelsea.
Naomi's attacker, Mary Konye, a
Nigerian also 21, from Canning Town, East London who is currently facing trial
has been charged over the attack and will stand trial at Snaresbrook Crown
Court in January.
Courtesy
of: Dailymail
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