Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts

12/13/12

Turkey takes a step to lift hijab ban on professional athletes: Hijabi Photos are now accepted for licence applications

Headscarved Martial Arts Professional Yenigül Uzan
Previously, women could not wear a headscarf while engaged in a professional sport and were not able to obtain a professional sports license without removing the headscarf for the requisite photo. In accordance with the new regulation, however, women will able to wear the headscarf while playing any sport professionally in Turkey and in their license photo.
The ban had been in effect since 1982. The move comes after approval of the use of the headscarf by the International Football Association Board (IFAB), football's ruling body, on July 5. A ban on the use of the headscarf for Muslim women footballers was lifted by the sport's rule-makers.
IFAB unanimously overturned the ban and agreed to rewrite the laws after studying reports by a FIFA medical officer. "Safety and medical issues have been removed for the use of the headscarf and it is approved that players can have the head scarf,” FIFA Secretary-General Jerome Valcke told Reuters.
Last year, the women's soccer team from Iran was prevented from playing their 2012 Olympic second round qualifying match against Jordan because they refused to remove their hijab before kickoff.
Iran, which had topped their group in the first round of Olympic qualifiers, was punished with an automatic 3-0 defeat, which abruptly ended their dreams of qualifying for the London games. Other sports, such as rugby and taekwondo, already allow the use of the hijab.

10/29/12

Raising An Olympian - NEVIN YANIT

P & G represents series about the mother behind Olympians of London 2012. 

9/2/12

Turkey's Nazmiye Muslu breaks records





Turkey's Nazmiye Muslu broke the world and Paralympic records to take gold ahead of silver medallist Zhe Cui of China

Islamic Reflections on Women’s Sporting Bodies in Relation to Sexuality, Modesty and Privacy

By Sertaç SEHLIKOGLU

During 2012 London Olympics, heated debates arose around the question of Muslim women’s participation to Olympics. Some of these discussions problematized the position of countries which have never sent a female Olympian (Brunei, Saudi Arabia and Qatar), while others discussed under which conditions headscarved (hijabi) Olympians should participate in the games. Although they come from very different ideaological, political, and religious perspectives, all these debates and interventions claimed the right to exercise power on the female body. As an activist blogger on Muslim women’s involvement in sports and a young anthropologist, I have been inquiring issues of women’s agency, desire, and privacy in my field research.  As I have been interviewing Muslim women doing sports in women-only gyms in Istanbul, I have asked them about their views on involvement in sports, privacy, modesty, and public sexuality.

In order to have a better understanding of the debates on Muslim sportswomen, one needs to keep two points in mind: The first one is the Islamic point that sports requires body movements that trouble the perceptions on women’s public visibility and public sexuality. The second point however is linked to a broader question on the boundaries between the masculine and the feminine; which are perceived to be physically yet discursively trespassed by professional sportswomen, who are therefore considered as troubling subjects.
The literature on sports and gender also emphasizes that women face higher levels of constraints than men regarding involvement in leisure and sports both in Western and in Muslim contexts (Shaw 1994, 1996; Henderson and Bialeschki 1993). While several scholars bring forward the original teachings of Islam which actually favor and advocate physical development sports for both sexes (Mahfoud 2008, Pfitzer 2008), several others criticize the ways in which Muslim women’s involvement in sports are overshadowed and restricted by hegemonic masculine discourses (Di-Capua 2006). Among those discussions, I am interested in whether and how Muslim women have developed strategies to increase and legitimize their involvement in sports both in the Muslim and non-Muslim and/or secular world.

MUSLIM WOMEN AND SPORTS: A CONTESTED AREA

Two female participants of Olympics from Turkey with other fencers, 1936. Image courtesy Sertac Sehlikoglu
We can group Muslim sportswomen into three based on their participation in international games. The first group of women is composed of those who are not following the Islamic dress code, some of whom do not believe that such dress code (ie, headscarf) is Islamic. Historically, this group has been involved in international games for much longer than the other two, since modernists in many Muslim societies viewed sports as a means of breaking women’s segregation and including them in public life in the early 20th century. The first Muslim women attended the 1936 Berlin Olympics: Suat Aşeni and Halet Çambel represented Turkey in fencing, 36 years after first women were allowed to compete in the Olympic Games. Turkey, as a country which accepts international dress regulations for different branches of sports, does not have any problem in sending its successful sportswomen to the Olympic Games, as long as the sportswomen follow the international dress codes in sports.
The second group of Muslim women is composed of those who believe in modesty and prefer observing Islam in terms of the dress code as well. These women often face other rules, such as those in international games, which forbid their headscarf based on safety and security concerns. Muslim sports activists propose “safe hijabs” to negotiate with security concerns and suggest alternative styles for different branches. FIFA, for instance, was in contact with designers for an approvable headgear to be used in international soccer games when this article was being written.
A third group of Muslim women however, are not allowed to participate in sports, not because of their religious choices or international game regulations, but because of the regulations of their own country. Iranian sportswomen are an example to this, since the branches of sports Iranian women are allowed to participate are limited: Lida Fariman, Manije Kazemi (archery), Marjan Kalhor (skiing), and Sara Khoshjamal Fekri (taekwondo) are four examples, who have represented Iran in the Olympic games in earlier years within clothes regulated by their country. In these Iranian cases, the dress codes of the sport are in line with Iran’s national dress code for modesty to be preserved. Similarly, and unfortunately, there are countries, such as the Southeast Asian nation of Brunei, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have not sent any single woman to the Olympic games until 2012. Such outfit regulations influence female citizens of these countries whether the sportwomen themselves are Muslims or not, since they are bounded with the codes both at national and at international level.
What all these groups of Muslim women seem to be sharing is that their bodies are at the center of heated ideological, political, or religious debates and contestations at national and international platforms; as these women are subjected to different forms of idealized discourses and pressures (of secularist and Islamist patriarchies) on multiple fronts.
The fatwas regarding sports are very explanatory in understanding the “Islamic” attitudes. Although Islamic rules do not necessarily pose an obstacle to the participation of women in sports, they can shape the sporting experience of women as gendered subjects. All of the fatwas on Islamic web sites concerning physical exercise begin with the importance of sports for health and encourage individuals to be physically active with reference to hadiths, with minor warnings on violence, fanaticism, or hooliganism. When it comes to women’s involvement in sports, the fatwas start using a more regulative language in details. Almost all of the suggested regulations and rules about women’s involvement in sports are related to gender segregation, and, more importantly, bodily exposure. Fatwas specify several rules that must be followed:  First, men and women must be segregated, since mixed environments may open channels for seduction, temptation and corruption. Fatwas reject any physical exercise that stir sexual urge or encourage moral perversion such as women practicing dancing and being watched by the public since each one of the these acts are coded as “sexual(ly appealing).” Indeed, those within Saudi Arabia who oppose the inclusion of women in sports do so because future implications and consequences of women’s involvement in sports might be un-Islamic although there is nothing in Islam that prohibits women from physical activity or even competitive sports.
Most of the time, the most convenient sport for Muslim sportswomen who have concerns about their body movements or Islamic veiling are the branches that do not require too much body movements – the movements which are perceived as ‘sexually appealing’ such as movement of hips (running) and breasts (jumping). The most popular sports for women from predominantly Muslim countries have been athletics, power lifting, fencing, archery, martial arts and table tennis. Such branches are more convenient especially if women are professionals and need to spend hours everyday for training. Women can easily find spaces for training and do not need to seek for special dedicated spaces.

WHAT IS THE BORDER OF VEIL, SEXUALITY AND SPORTS?

Set of photos shown to informants and asked what they think. Image courtesy Sertac Sehlikoglu
The Islamic veiling, whether in the format of a simple headscarf or in more sophisticated outfits, does have a spiritual value for Muslim women as they cover their bodies during prayer. Such a value is too important to underestimate. Yet, the borders of a veiled body also stay on the edge of the gender binary of modern Islamic heterosexual norms. As apparent in the fatwas, less veiled body of a Muslim woman arouses hyper-femininity yet reflects homoerotic boundaries of women in Islamic cultures. However, the body of a Muslim sportswoman is troubling not only because it is sexually arousing as a female body, but also because it trespasses into the masculine zone.
During my field research on women-only gyms in Istanbul, I interviewed 40 women on their involvement in physical exercise and how their involvement is shaped or constrained by people closest to them at home or at work. These women prefer such homosocial spaces simply because they do not feel “comfortable”, as they put it, when they can be seen by men. I showed my informants, who were sporty but not involved in any professional sports, photos of various Muslim sportswomen taken during international games. They were all familiar with physical exercise and accepted Islamic gender norms at one level, therefore preferred homosocial spaces to exercise. The photos women were shown included Sania Mirza (Indian tennis player, non-veiled), Roqaya Al-Gassra (Bahraini Athlete, veiled), female wrestlers, volleyball players, and weightlifters. Amongst all, Al-Gassra aroused the most mixed feelings amongst women. Women did not feel comfortable about Al-Gassra’s look since she “looked like a guy” and she was revealing her body although she was covering her head. On the other hand, most of my veiled informants were proud to see a ‘veiled’ (not a Muslim but veiled) woman in international games but they still found it unnecessary. The Olympics and international games therefore, raise the debate on the ways in which a woman’s body is exposed to international audiences which is linked to complex feelings on national pride (and how this sense of pride and nation is perceived), women’s public sexuality, modesty and Islamic pride (which also takes gendered forms).  Indeed, Al-Gassra, as a professional veiled athlete, was becoming part of such Islamic pride and become target of criticisms for two reasons: for her low-veiling and tomboy look. Thus, Islamic pride of a woman is expected to be both normative and modest; both of which are violated in the case of Al-Gassra.

8/13/12

An Olympic first for Muslim women? Not really

BY: EVA SAJOO
VANCOUVER, BC, Aug 12, 2012/ Troy Media/ – In the wake of the 2012 Olympics, there are a lot of firsts to reflect on. It is the first time since 1904 that Canada won a medal in soccer (thanks to our women’s team), the first time women boxed at the Games, and the first time that Saudi Arabia – along with neighbouring Qatar and Brunei – sent female athletes.
The appearance of Sarah Attar in the 800 meter race, and Wojdan Shaherkani in judo, has been hailed by some as a triumph for Muslim women, In part because Shaherkani was granted permission to compete in a headscarf, despite earlier concerns that the drape around her head and neck would pose a safety risk in the ring.
But the significance of Shakerkani’s performance seems limited because Saudi authorities only entered female athletes after intense pressure from the International Olympic Committee. Not much is changed in the ultra-misogynist Kingdom of the al-Sauds, where women are not even permitted to drive, let alone to engage in sports or physical training at school. Many of these restrictions are relatively recent introductions to Saudi society – despite attempts to justify them as Islamic requirements.
Whatever Shaherkani’s appearance may mean for Saudi women, it certainly does not represent progress for Muslim women. The massive coverage of her story ignores the fact that Muslim women have been competing in the Olympic Games (far more successfully that their Saudi sisters) for decades.
Take Nawal El Moutawakel, the Moroccan hurdler who won the 400 meter race in the 1984 Summer Olympics. Her success smashed stereotypes in her country – and earned her royal commendation, including a decree that girls born on the day of her victory should be named after her. She has since organised successful local racing events for Moroccan women, and is currently a member of the International Olympic Committee.
Soraya Haddad, an Algerian judoka known as “The Iron Lady of El Kseur” won a bronze medal in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. This year Iraqi sprinter Dana Abdul Razzaq competed in the Games, and was her country’s flag bearer in the opening ceremony.
There were many other Muslim athletes in London this year, including Egyptian weight lifter Nahla Ramadan Mohammed and Turkey’s Asli Captir Alptekin and Gamze Bulut, who took gold and silver in the women’s 1500 metre race.
These women don’t make headlines for their religion. Is it because they don’t feel the need to wear headscarves? Or the fact that their countries have not discouraged their participation? The truth is that Wojdan Shaherkani fits much better into the western stereotype of Muslim women: uncompetitive hijabis labouring under patriarchal oppression. Runners who take gold and not scarves don’t get reported as “Muslim.”
Saudi Arabia has been working hard to export its peculiarly backward attitude toward women as the authentic version of Islam for Muslims everywhere. It has had considerable success on this score, considering how widely the headscarf has been adopted as “authentically” Muslim. Ironically, when western media represent Shaherkani as an example of progress for Muslim women, we inadvertently reinforce the notion that the Saudi version is “real Islam.” How do we know if a woman is Muslim? She wears a headscarf.
The fact that Olympic regulations have been changed to allow women to cover their heads for religious reasons is a step forward. It removes additional barriers for heroic women like Afghanistan’s Tahmina Kohistani, who had to overcome extraordinary hurdles in her war-torn and very conservative country just to be able to compete. For her, wearing a headscarf is necessary to avoid severe repercussions at home. Her performance nevertheless presents Afghans with a bold vision of what women can do.
For Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia, having women compete in the Olympics is a major change. However, it is worth remembering that participation in sport, like politics and business, is not new for Muslim women. They were active even on the battlefields of the Arabian peninsula centuries ago. In our own time, women drove freely in the streets of Saudi Arabia. Patriarchal forces, like the Saudi authorities, have attempted to wipe out this history. Only such amnesia could make their assertion that female oppression is required by Islam seem credible.
Media coverage that buys this story reinforces the claim that women who do not cover are somehow less Muslim. This only slows down women’s progress in conservative societies against barriers that have everything to do with patriarchy and nothing to do with faith.
Eva Sajoo is a Research Associate with the Centre for the Comparative Study of Muslim Societies and Cultures at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. She has a graduate degree in International Development and Education from the University of London. Her published academic writing focuses on the rights of women and minorities. She has contributed widely to publications on Islam and the Muslim world. Eva has taught at the University of British Columbia, and the Beijing University of Science and Technology. She currently teaches at SFU. Website:http://www.ccsmsc.sfu.ca/about_us/faculty/eva_sajoo. Follow Eva on Twitter@esajoo

8/11/12

Turkey's Nur Tatar wins Olympic taekwondo silver medal

South Korean Hwang Kyung-seon defended her Olympic taekwondo title by beating Turkey's Nur Tatar in the welterweight division at the London Games on Friday.
Tatar's advance to final face-off brought Turkey's second silver in the Olympics.

Hwang had vowed to win gold in London after managing only a bronze at the world championships in Korea last year, and the 26-year-old enjoyed a comfortable 12-5 win over European champion Tatar to deliver South Korea's 13th gold medal of the Games.

American Paige McPherson and Helena Fromm of Germany won bronze medals through the repechage competition.
Source: http://www.todayszaman.com/newsDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=289227

Olympic Glories Came From Turkey and Bahrain

LONDON: Asli Cakir Alptekin led a shock 1-2 for Turkey by winning the gold medal in 4:10:23, handing her country a first-ever gold medal in track and field, in women's 1,500m final at the Olympic Stadium.
Bulut, who also took European silver behind Alptekin in Helsinki and has improved her time in the event by almost 15 seconds this season, took silver in 4:10.40.
With a bronze medal, Maryam Yusuf Jamal last night gave Bahrain its first Olympics medal.
Maryam claimed the bronze a further 0.34 of a second adrift.

Source: http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=335713

8/9/12

Turkish Sprinter Sema Apak participated Olympics as Family

 
Turkish sprinter Sema Apak  who is specialized in the 400m hurdles event, participated London Olympics with her husband who is an Olympic bronze medalist hammer thrower Eşref Apak. Personal best time of Sema Apak in the 400m hurdles is 56.62 scored 2012 in Ankara, Turkey. They are the first from Turkey participating Olympics as husband and wife.
Apak family in London Olimpics with their son Ali

8/8/12

With Turkey record, Nevin Yanıt becomes fifth in 100m hurdles

Turkey’s Nevin Yanıt finished fifth in the women's 100-meter hurdles final during the athletics in the Olympic Stadium at the 2012 Summer Olympics, in London on Tuesday. (Photo: AA)
7 August 2012 / TODAYSZAMAN.COM,
Turkish runner Nevin Yanıt finished fifth in the 100-meter hurdle at the 2012 London Olympics, clocking in at 12.58 seconds, also a Turkey record.
She secured the same performance in the semi-finals earlier on Tuesday and finished second.
Yanıt in 2010 emerged triumphant from the 20th European Athletics Championships in Barcelona, where she clinched the gold in the women's 100-meter hurdle, becoming the first Turk to win a medal at the event.
Australia's Sally Pearson won the Olympic gold medal in the women's 100m hurdles. Dawn Harper of the United States won the silver and Kellie Wells of the United States won the bronze.

8/7/12

Turkish runners book spots in semis

Nevin yarına konsantre oldu

Turkey’s Nevin Yanıt will run in today’s women’s 100-meter hurdles semifinals at the London Olympic Games after winning her heats. 

Yanıt, who came to London after successfully defending her European title, ran in 12.70 to win her heats. She will try to qualify for tonight’s final. The top two finishers in the three semifinals and the two best performers outside the top two spots will advance to the final. 

Tonight’s semifinals will start at 9:15 pm, and the final race will be held at 11 p.m. Turkish time. 
Two Turkish athletes also advanced from their heats in the women’s 1500-meters yesterday. Aslı Çakır Alptekin finished her heat in third place, while Gamze Bulut won the next heat to qualify for tomorrow’s semifinals. 

Alptekin and Bulut completed a one-two finish in the 1500m finals in the European Championships in June. The 1500-meters final will be run on Aug. 10.

8/2/12

Muslim Female Olympians from the Middle East

Saudi Arabia’s, Brunei's and Qatar’s decision to send female athletes to London makes the 2012 Games the first where every country has a woman on its team.
Wojdan Ali Seraj Abdulrahim Shaherkani — Saudi ArabiaShaherkani gestures as she walks with the Saudi contingent during the London Games’ Opening Ceremonies. Saudi Arabia's first female Olympic athletes dressed in traditional hijabs for the festivities. International Judo Federation President Marius L. Vizer said Shaherkani, 16, would have to fight without a hijab, a decision that is likely to cause controversy in Saudi Arabia, where women’s participation in sports has long been a contentious issue. Suzanne Plunkett / Reuters


Neda Shahsavari — Iran
Shahsavari, 25, Iran's first woman to compete in table tennis at the Olympics, eyes the ball during a practice session in Tehran in early July. Shahsavari said she was "thrilled" to be going to the London Games.


Isil Alben — Turkey


Turkish guard Alben, 26, right, vies with Angolan guard Catarina Camufal during a preliminary round Group A basketball match at the Summer Games. Turkey won 72-50




Sarah Alflaij — Bahrain




Sarah Attar — Saudi Arabia


Attar, 19, enters the stadium during the Opening Ceremonies. The track athlete runs the women’s 800 meters.


Sara Mohamed Baraka and Fatma Rashed — Egypt


Baraka, 20, and Rashed, 28, compete in the lightweight double sculls competition at Eton Dorney in Windsor, England. Harry How / Getty Images


Bahya Mansour al-Hamad — Qatar


Hamad, 20, competes during a 10-meter air rifle qualification round at the Royal Artillery Barracks in London.


Nurdan Karagoz — Turkey
Karagoz, 25, musters her strength during the 48-kilogram Group A weightlifting competition at the Summer Games. Laurence Griffiths / Getty Images


Neslihan Darnel — Turkey
Darnel, 28, spikes the ball as Qiuyue Wei, No. 8, and Yunwen Ma, No. 15., of China defend during women's volleyball at Earls Court in London. Elsa / Getty Images


Khadija Mohammad — United Arab Emirates
Coach Najwan al-Zawawi assists Khadija Mohammad, 17, during a practice in Dubai. Mohammad competes in weightlifting’s 75-kilogram category and is the first female lifter from the Persian Gulf region to compete in the Olympics. Kamran Jebreili / AP


Sarra Besbes — Tunisia
Besbes, 23, celebrates after a point against Xiaojuan Luo of China during an epee fencing round at the Summer Games. Hannah Johnston / Getty Images