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Hijab No Obstacle to Asian
Gold
IslamOnline.net
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"Wearing a veil proves
that Muslim women face no obstacles and encourages
them to participate in sport," said victorious
Ghasara. (Reuters) |
DOHA: A young Bahraini
sprinter made history for Muslim women athletes after winning a
well-deserved gold medal at the Asian Games on Monday, December
11, proving that hijab was no obstacle
to excellence.
"This is a glory to all Muslim
women," said 24-year-old Ruqaya Al-Ghasara who
won the gold medal in the 200-meters in 23.19 seconds,
Agence France Presse (AFP) reported.
The devout Muslim immediately went
down on her knees after crossing the line and touched her lips
and then head to the track.
"I'm very thankful for being a
Muslim; it's a blessing."
Al-Ghasara, a sports management
student who gave every ounce of her 65kg frame to win the race,
said the big win was a prize for her hard work.
"I deserved the 200m gold medal. I
was the strongest and the best."
Ghasara, who won
bronze in the 100m on Saturday
after a false start which she blamed on an ear infection,
believes this is just the beginning of her sports career.
"I have won gold in the Pan-Arab
and West Asian Games but this is the biggest performance of my
career, and hopefully the start on the road to more titles."
Last December, Al-Ghasara stole
thunder when she won her 100 meters heat to become the first
woman to win a race at the West Asian Games (WAG), which had
previously been men only.
She won a trio of silver medals in the
60m, 200m and 400m at the inaugural Asian Indoor
Championships in Tehran in 2004, and a sprint double at the
Pan-Arab Championships in Amman a year earlier.
"Hopefully I'll get something in
next year's world championships in Osaka."
Encouraging
The devout Muslim athlete wore her
trademark white hijab - bearing the motif of a US sporting goods
company - pinned tightly under her chin for the race.
Her legs and arms were also fully
covered in the red and white of Bahrain with a singlet over her
upper body.
After winning, Ghasara insisted
there was no problem in running with her
hijab, even in the exhausting 200-meters race which calls
for a tremendous burst of energy and mental resolve.
"I have a great desire to show that
there are no problems with wearing these clothes," the champion
said.
"Wearing
conservative clothes has encouraged me. It's not an obstacle …
quite the opposite."
This is the first time in the history of the Asian games that a
Muslim woman kitted in a full tracksuit and a hijab has won a
track gold medal and that too in the draining 200m sprint.
Ghasara hopes her win would inspire other Muslim women to join
in competitive sports.
"I advise all Muslim girls to do
sport, athletics. It's very good for your health and country.
"Wearing a veil proves that Muslim
women face no obstacles and encourages them to participate in
sport."
In the 15th Asian Games, the first
to be held in an Arab state, other Muslim women have competed in
religion-conforming cloths.
During the few recent years, a debate has been raging in
the West about Muslim women's right to
wear hijab in public.
Describing it as a religious symbol
and not an obligatory dress code as Muslims believe, France has
triggered the controversy in 2004 by adopting a bill banning the
hair veil in state schools.
Shortly afterwards, other European
countries, chiefly Germany, followed the French lead.
International figures stood behind
the Muslim right, including London Mayor Ken Livingstone, who
described the ban as an "anti-Muslim measure."
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