
She also shared that she had borrowed money from friends to buy clothes for Bigg Boss.
Uorfi Javed Faces Online Hate After Winning The Traitors India; Calls Out Sick Mentality of Trolls
Uorfi Javed Faces Online Hate After Winning The Traitors India latest News Update: Uorfi Javed, who emerged as the winner of The Traitors India Season 1 — hosted by Karan Johar — is receiving immense hate online despite her well-earned victory. The reality show’s finale episode streamed yesterday, where Uorfi and co-finalist Nikita Luther, both innocents, defeated the traitors to claim the title and the prize money.
Notably, Uorfi had earlier participated in Bigg Boss OTT Season 1, which premiered on August 8, 2021, on Voot. She was eliminated in the first week, becoming the first contestant to exit that season.
During a heartfelt moment in the finale, each of the four finalists had a one-on-one conversation with Karan Johar. Uorfi emotionally expressed that winning the show would be her answer to those who questioned, hated, and even threatened her.
In an emotional post after her win, Uorfi wrote, “From losing Bigg Boss (being the first one to be eliminated) to winning The Traitors.”
“The journey wasn’t easy — how many times I’ve cried, had breakdowns, wanted to give up, wanted to run away. I’ve been called names, received death and rape threats, faced online and offline hate — but I never stopped. Maybe the universe knew I needed this.”
She also shared that she had borrowed money from friends to buy clothes for Bigg Boss.
“When I lost Bigg Boss, I thought I had lost my last chance at success or a good life. I had taken udhaar from friends to buy clothes. At that time, I didn’t even know if I’d be able to repay that udhaar. People have always doubted me — even now — but this still won’t stop me. The hate never has, and never will, stop me. I took out three traitors — that can’t be luck. Till the last moment, I didn’t give up. I strategised.”
Unfortunately, after her victory, Uorfi began receiving an alarming number of hateful messages and direct threats, many of which she revealed in a separate post. She highlighted how some people resort to extreme language and derogatory terms simply because their favourite contestant didn’t win.
“When you don’t like something a girl does, just drop the ‘R’ word. Not the first time I’ve been threatened or abused like this, but this time it’s not because of my clothes — it’s because I won a show,” she wrote.
“Imagine being so petty that when your favourite player doesn’t win, you resort to abuse and threats. These are the most decent ones I’ve uploaded. No matter what I do, people just love hating and abusing. Harsh ko na nikalti toh ‘pyaar mein andhi,’ Harsh ko nikal diya toh ‘dhokebaaz.’ Purav ko jeetne deti toh ‘bewakoof,’ nahi jeetne diya toh ‘cheater.’ Hate has never stopped me before, and it never will.”
The extent of the trolling has raised serious concerns, with many expressing worry over Uorfi’s safety, as the online hate has crossed a dangerous line. What started as fandom wars has become targeted mental abuse.
Even Purav Jha, one of the show’s traitors who was eliminated because of Uorfi’s clever gameplay, came forward to support her. Commenting on her post, he wrote, “Tu enjoy kar darling, you are the winner. Mat dhyan de (Don’t pay attention).”
Uorfi’s win was not just a reality show triumph — it was a personal and symbolic victory against hate, doubt, and judgment. But the aftermath also exposes a darker side of fan culture, where abuse replaces sportsmanship and victory becomes a target.
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