Toronto Star

The amazing Azmi sisters

Five Toronto siblings, playing on the same team, want to boost ball hockey in Muslim community

- MARY ORMSBY FEATURE WRITER

The automatic doors glide open at the Paul Coffey Arena and nearly half the players on the “red” ball hockey team — five Azmi sisters, ages 16 to 24 — rush in and down a few stairs to a change room.

The other team is warming up on the floor. So are the Azmis’ teammates.

It’s Thursday night in the Toronto Women’s Ball Hockey Associatio­n and Asiyah, 24; Nuha, 22; Husnah, 20; Sajidah,17, and Haleemah,16, don’t want to be late for the faceoff.

Ball hockey is the Azmis’ sporting passion. As sisters. As athletes. As young Muslim women working to break down stereotype­s.

“We really want to grow the sport in the Muslim community,” said Husnah, who is studying environmen­t and sustainabi­l- ity science at Ryerson. “Like, we really want to.”

A fledgling Muslim ball hockey league the sisters once played in died and the Azmis — now suiting up in two leagues, year-round — are hoping to revive it. But on this night, a new game awaits. Game jerseys are tugged into place. Helmets slide over hijabs. Gloves on. Sticks in hand. They jog to the floor just in time for the 7 p.m. ball drop.

Then the Azmis run. And run and run and run. There’s a lot of running in ball hockey — one of the sisters’ strengths, even on a hot, humid summer evening inside an old hockey barn.

“I love running,” said Haleemah, who, with her siblings, will also compete on a second team at the Ontario ball hockey championsh­ips Aug. 18-20 in Oshawa.

“When I run, when I get the speed in there, I love to feel the rush of the running.”

The sisters play a strong game using skills acquired during years of organized ball hockey. Quick passing. Shot blocking. No shrinking from body contact when battling along the boards. And they are stealthy, notching turnovers by swiping the orange ball off opponents’ sticks.

The red team wins; fist bumps all around between the Azmis and their teammates. Then the two sides shake hands.

Having family as teammates is fun and reassuring, said Sajidah — known as Saj.

“It’s just super comforting,” Saj said of strategizi­ng with her sisters.

“We can talk to each other and discuss what the issue is (on the floor). We know each other so well and we can play better together, too. It’s just more fun.”

Michelle Rosenberg is a veteran player in the 34-year-old summer league. She plays against the Azmis’ red team and said she’s “blown away by their skill” and discipline.

“They’re very aggressive on the floor — not aggressive in a nasty way, but they play the game fully,” said the 54-year-old. “They don’t play it meekly.”

In the spring, Rosenberg competed on a charity tournament team with the Azmis. She enjoyed the spirited, hard-working siblings so much, she volunteere­d to coach their “C” division team at provincial­s.

Amy Davidson, 40, is an Azmi teammate this season. Last year, she played against them, recalling “they’re tough.”

“They’re fast and they’re good and it’s hard to beat a player who’s better than you,” Davidson said.

“They’re quite helpful, they give a lot of advice on the bench and they’re very motivating.”

But how are they with each other? Ever bicker on the bench? Let’s ask the Azmis. “Oh yeah, a lot,” the chorus of five answered, laughing — and noting any squabbling usually happens when the game’s not going well.

“We can hear our teammates saying, ‘Uh oh, the sisters are arguing,’ ” said Asiyah, lowering her voice dramatical­ly as her siblings giggled and nodded.

“Then on the ride home, we say ‘OK, next week we have to keep it super-positive.’ ”

Playing ball hockey has been a family tradition since the children were young.

There are nine Azmi siblings, who all grew up playing ball hockey on the street or in the driveway. The two eldest are sons Yusef, 28, and Salih, 27. Then the roster of five athletic sisters, followed by brother Tayyib, 14, and the youngest sister, Mubeenah, 13.

On Thursday nights, Tayyib and Mubeenah pile into the family’s resilient 2008 van — a 15-seater with the back bench removed and 255,000 kilometres on the speedomete­r — with their five sisters. Nuha drives. Tayyib, who plays ice hockey at Goulding Park, and Mubeenah, who hopes to join the ball hockey team when she’s older, stand at the arena glass near the benches. They quietly cheer the red team.

All the siblings can skate, but not all played ice hockey; it was too expensive an option for father Shaheen and mother Fara to manage with a large family.

Ball hockey was more practical.

“It’s one of those sports you can play on the street or with your friends just casually and that’s what got us interested originally,” said Asiyah, who still practises on their North York street with her sisters.

It was also Dad’s sport. Shaheen Azmi, who immigrated to Canada from Pakistan as a toddler, was an avid ball hockey player (and remains an ardent Toronto Maple Leafs fan) and encouraged all his children to try the sport.

Fara, who arrived in Canada from her native Guyana at 26, supports her children’s healthy, active lifestyles. Shaheen is the Ontario Human Rights Commission’s director of policy, education, monitoring and outreach. Fara operates an at-home child-care centre.

The sisters’ passion for the game grew in 2012 when a group of mothers from Tayyib’s hockey team invited the three eldest sisters to play in an all-female league at Downsview Park.

They lost many games that rookie season at the Hangar — and by a lot of goals — and, eventually, the ice hockey moms drifted away.

“We stuck with it (and) we kept playing,” said Husnah. Soon, Saj and Haleemah joined their sisters at Downsview for fall and winter seasons.

And the Azmis improved, quickly. That progress was meaningful to the sisters, not just as athletes but as Muslims, to challenge stereotype­s and “prove a point,” said Nuha.

“We wanted to get better, we didn’t give up after (losing) 10-0 games,” said Nuha, a fashion design graduate.

“People thought (at first) that maybe these girls are really (weak players); then when we got better, they were like ‘Oh, hijabi girls playing and they’re good.’ That’s an important thing for us.”

The sisters — who are also devoted Leafs fans — would like to encourage the Muslim community to learn their favourite game.

They hope to help form a league in Scarboroug­h or develop drop-in training sessions for Muslim women to generate interest.

“We want to be good representa­tives, we want to encourage other people too, which would be awesome,” said Asiyah, who works in the financial industry.

The Azmis, who joined the summer house league’s west division in 2016, are now focused on preparing for the provincial championsh­ips. They’ve joined a gym to improve their overall fitness and with Rosenberg on their bench, they feel confident.

 ?? GALIT RODAN FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Nuha Azmi catches a breather during play at the Paul Coffey Arena in Mississaug­a.
GALIT RODAN FOR THE TORONTO STAR Nuha Azmi catches a breather during play at the Paul Coffey Arena in Mississaug­a.
 ?? GALIT RODAN PHOTOS FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? The Azmi sisters at home in Toronto. From left: Husnah, 20, Sajidah, 17, Haleemah, 16, Asiyah, 24, and Nuha, 22.
GALIT RODAN PHOTOS FOR THE TORONTO STAR The Azmi sisters at home in Toronto. From left: Husnah, 20, Sajidah, 17, Haleemah, 16, Asiyah, 24, and Nuha, 22.
 ??  ?? On left: Asiyah shows off her speed with the ball. Right: Sajidah and her sister, Haleemah, head out after a game.
On left: Asiyah shows off her speed with the ball. Right: Sajidah and her sister, Haleemah, head out after a game.

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