Great post!...more
posted Tuesday, June 22, 2010 at 10:11am PDT on Women�s sports: Visibility matters
|
posted by Muslim Women in Sports A collection of news and articles on Muslim women and sports around the world. I decided to create the blog after I started doing research on the subject and recognized the lacuna of a resource of collected materials on the subject. |
|
|
|
|
TEHRAN - Iranian female footballers will take part in the Youth Olympic Games in Singapore this August after world football authorities lifted a ban on the wearing of the Islamic head veil, an Iranian official said on Tuesday.
"I think this is one of the big jobs done by the football federation," the chairman of the Iranian football federation Ali Kafashian told the ISNA news agency, referring to the lifting of the ban by FIFA.
"I think this is a great success for the Muslim nations because now women footballers can compete," Kafashian said.
"So we are currently designing a special women's football kit with the help of some domestic sportswear maker."
More than 3,600 young athletes between the ages of 14 and 18 years will take part in the inaugural event in Singapore from August 14-26.
Kafashian explained that the lifting of the ban came after he met with FIFA president Sepp Blatter in Geneva last month. According to Iranian media, the ban was imposed on October 2009.
"So we urgently got ourselves to Switzerland and in our meeting with Blatter we told him about the effort to boost the standing of Iranian women footballers," he explained.
"We told him that preventing them playing with the Islamic veil is preventing the growth of (women's) football.
"Then FIFA told us that they would study our reasoning and get back to us. They shortly afterwards announced that veiled women could take part in competitions."
FIFA have not confirmed they have lifted the ban, saying only in a brief statement: "We have been in contact with the Iranian federation on this matter for the past nine months."
The Islamic dress code is mandatory in Iran, which has been under clerical rule for more than three decades.
Every post-pubescent woman regardless of her religion or nationality must cover her hair and bodily contours in public.
National state-run television rarely shows women's sports events though many Iranian women are avid sports enthusiasts -- and practitioners.
Several have won medals in international tournaments that have allowed them to compete while wearing headscarves and observing Islamic dress code, notably Sara Khoshjamal-Fekri, 21.
She became a heroine at home as the first Iranian female taekwondo Olympic qualifier and was listed by Time magazine as one of the "100 Olympic Athletes to Watch" at the 2008 Beijing Games, where she was knocked out in the quarter-finals.
Marjan Kalhor, national skiing champion and Homa Hosseini, national rowing champion made histroy when they carried the Islamic republic's flag at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olypmics and the Beijing Games resepctively.
Source: http://business.maktoob.com/20090000466134/Iranian_girls_set_for_youth_games_after_ban/Article.htm
View Original Post at muslimwomeninsports.blogspot.com
|
|
|
|
MOST POPULAR POSTS
posted by AnnGaff 06/20/10 at 7:20am
posted by MsAkiba 10/11/09 at 11:40am
posted by WTA Women's Tennis 10/07/09 at 12:14pm
posted by Bike Diva 10/08/09 at 12:49pm
posted by All White Kit 06/21/10 at 12:04pm
posted by AnnGaff 06/06/10 at 10:59pm
posted by Draft Day Suit 05/13/10 at 5:00pm
posted by AnnGaff 06/18/10 at 10:18pm
posted by Women's Sports Blog 06/20/10 at 6:37pm
posted by They're Playing Basketball 06/14/10 at 9:30am
LATEST WTS POSTS
posted by HoopFeed.com
Today at 4:18pm
posted by Pretty Tough
Today at 2:35pm
posted by Balanced Health and Nutrition
Today at 1:40pm
posted by The Barrel Racing Blog
Today at 1:18pm
posted by Run Girl Run
Today at 1:14pm
posted by All White Kit
Today at 1:11pm
posted by A Glam Slam
Today at 1:06pm
posted by They're Playing Basketball
Today at 1:00pm
posted by Chantelle Says
Today at 12:58pm
posted by HoopFeed.com
Today at 12:39pm
No one has commented on this yet. Be the first!