Bianty Rojer Gomperts

For Bianty Rojer Gomperts, purpose did not arrive all at once. It was built slowly through experience, responsibility, and the kind of personal challenges that change the way a person sees the world.

orb

Her Story

Bianty has lived her entire life in Amerikaanenkamp, and she'll tell you that means something. In a neighborhood where people still check on each other, where doors stay open and names are known, she grew up understanding that community isn't built through grand gestures but through consistent, quiet presence. Raised by a single mother, she was sometimes cared for by the woman across the street, a neighbor who became what Bianty calls her "bonus grandmother" and who she still visits to this day. That detail says everything about who she is. Her Curaçao is December on the island, when the year slows down and everyone seems to remember at the same time what actually matters. Families stretched out at the beach, food passed between hands, music finding its way into the evening air, and the particular ease of people who genuinely enjoy each other. As she puts it herself: Mi stima mi pida piedra. I love my little rock (Curaçao).

She works as a high school teacher and tutor, a path she didn't plan but has come to see as exactly right. Life brought her back to Curaçao unexpectedly, through circumstances that felt uncertain at the time, and what could have been a detour became a direction. In front of her students every day, she leads with encouragement rather than authority and has found that young people respond most to someone who shows up honestly. What people sometimes don't see behind her composure is that confidence, for Bianty, has been something earned rather than inherited. She has battled overthinking, held herself to exhausting standards, and learned the hard way that self-compassion isn't weakness. It's the very thing that keeps you standing. That understanding now lives in how she teaches, and in how she carries herself on every stage she steps onto.

Five years ago, Bianty's mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. That experience reshaped her from the inside. Walking alongside her mother through the slow losses that disease brings has required a kind of love that doesn't ask for anything back, and it turned into a mission: raising awareness, opening conversations in a community that doesn't always talk openly about these things, and making sure families who are living this quietly know they are not invisible. Her advocacy was recognized through the World Alzheimer's Campaign in 2024. A year later, she represented Curaçao at Reina Hispanoamericana in Bolivia, where she earned Runner-Up. Two very different stages, one consistent truth: Bianty shows up with purpose, whether the room is a classroom, a living room, or an international arena. She returns to Miss Universe Curaçao 2026 not chasing something she missed, but carrying everything she's gained.

And then there's the other side of her, the one that tends to catch people off guard: she loves motorsports and drag racing, and has every intention of getting behind the wheel herself one day. Feminine and fearless, she'd say. A queen with a little rebel spirit.

"To me, crystallizing your dreams means trusting the journey even when you can't yet see where it's going. Just like crystals don't form overnight, the dreams worth having take time, patience, and the courage to keep moving forward through uncertainty. It's not just about reaching a destination. It's about transforming into the woman you dreamed of becoming."