Stories

Freedom Rider

Words David Smiedt
Sports Illustrated Swimsuit On Location, Ice Palace Film Studios, Miami, USA - 11 May 2019Paulina Porizkova Photo by MediaPunch/Shutterstock

If you had grown up in Sweden in the late 1960s and early seventies, you would have known the name Paulina Porizkova. It was a byword for a type of natural liberty denied a human being due to forces that Porizkova, specifically, was too young to oppose, let alone understand. For it was to Sweden that her anti-Soviet dissident parents fled from Czechoslovakia on a motorbike after the Warsaw Pact invasion of 1968.

Paulina was left with a grandmother, and Czech authorities refused a family reunification with such blockheaded vehemence that it caused two significant events. The first was that her mother felt she had no option but to make a kidnap attempt of her seven-year-old child. The second was that it failed but fomented such a cause célèbre that the Swedish statesman Olof Palme intervened, and the family was reunited in Sweden.

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At 13, her picture somehow crossed the desk of the famed modelling scout John Casablancas, but only because it had been included in a stack of shots provided by a friend of Porizkova’s who dreamed of being a make-up artist in Paris. Had her mate been a tad less ambitious, Porizkova might still be languishing in the smallest of type as a footnote in Swedish history.

Read the full story in Issue 82 of The Rake – on newsstands now.

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