Kuwait Times

Iraq’s girl weightlift­ers also boost family finances

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The weightlift­ers on Iraq’s national women’s team train hard every day, both to bring home the medals and to help ease the financial burden of running a home. Jerking weights heavier than themselves at a rundown gym in Baghdad’s conservati­ve Shiite neighborho­od of Sadr City, the young women and girls come together for three hours every day. The girls are focused as they work out between the small gym’s peeling pale mint walls, one of which is adorned with a giant painted Iraqi flag.

With their dark hair in high buns and dressed in team green tracksuit tops, black shorts and leggings, they raise an arm and turn from side to side to warm up. Then they work out hanging from a pull-up bar, before moving to different mats to get down to the business of lifting weights. “To those who say weightlift­ing is not for girls, I say we can do everything men do,” says Huda Salim Al-Saedi, 20, patting chalk powder from her hands.

“I challenge men to lift weights and I’m proud of it,” says the weightlift­er, her eyebrows trimmed neatly and a black bandana keeping her hair from falling in her face. Huda was one of the first to be recruited when coach Abbas Ahmed in 2011 set out to create Iraq’s first national female weightlift­ing team. At first, it was an uphill battle.

Society’s rejection

“It was very, very hard,” says the former men’s coach, who is now 54. “Society rejected the idea,” with conservati­ves considerin­g the sport inappropri­ate for women and girls. There was also no state funding for the project. So Ahmed first approached families whose members were already fans of the sport. Huda seemed like an ideal candidate. She had practiced Taekwondo since the age of eight and had long been a fan of weightlift­ing on television. Today, she’s a cornerston­e of the Iraqi women’s team and its most promising member. Huda helped to train her sister Hadeel, who just turned 17, and last year both of them competed in Asian championsh­ips.

The 20-year-old won bronze in the “snatch” discipline in her category at the Asian Championsh­ips in Turkmenist­an, lifting 90 kilos in one swift motion above her head. She finished first overall at the Asian Junior Championsh­ip in Nepal. Her younger sister Hadeel also competed there taking 10th place lifting 68 kilos in the “snatch,” while in another competitio­n in Kathmandu, the Asian Youth Championsh­ips, she came in fourth overall. But beyond making their relatives proud, Huda and Hadeel’s accomplish­ments have also provided their family with some financial security. “Thanks to weightlift­ing, I have a salary and money to cover my family’s needs every month,” Huda says, with her sister’s pay cheque also helping make ends meet.

‘Welcomed as heroes’ The women’s team is sponsored by the police club, which pays each of its eight members a monthly salary of $400 to $800 — a considerab­le sum for some families. If Huda and Hadeel did not receive support from the club, their family could not pay their monthly rent of some $330, their father Salim Noma says. Over time, he says, support has grown for the girls in the conservati­ve neighborho­od. “Everybody has ended up supporting them. They’re welcomed as heroes every time they return from a competitio­n,” says Noma as he watches his daughters train.

Female weightlift­ing has provided an unexpected source of pride-and safety net-for some families in the working-class neighborho­od. Loujain Hazem, 15, gave up her studies to focus on the sport, winning a silver medal at the West Asia championsh­ips in Jordan last year. “Our coach has taught us determinat­ion and perseveran­ce,” she says. “I’m sure our efforts will pay off, in terms of both weightlift­ing and money.” The younger generation is also dreaming big. Every day after school, the father of 12-year-old Roqaya picks her up and they weave through the traffic jams of Baghdad on his moped to the gym in Sadr City. With her hair tied in a pink bow, she lifts two large red weights above her head. “I hope one day to take part in the Olympics,” says Roqaya, already aiming high. — AFP

I challenge men to lift weights and I’m proud of it

 ??  ?? A reveler of the Mangueira samba school performs during the first night of Rio’s Carnival at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — AFP
A reveler of the Mangueira samba school performs during the first night of Rio’s Carnival at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — AFP
 ??  ?? An art installati­on by Turkish artist Yan Kose featuring bird nesting boxes mounted on the side of an apartment building and entitled “Tek G?z Oda” (One eye room) is displayed in Istanbul. — AFP
An art installati­on by Turkish artist Yan Kose featuring bird nesting boxes mounted on the side of an apartment building and entitled “Tek G?z Oda” (One eye room) is displayed in Istanbul. — AFP
 ??  ?? Iraqi weightlift­er Khadeeja Ismal Abdullah, trains at a club in Sadr City, east of Baghdad.
Iraqi weightlift­er Khadeeja Ismal Abdullah, trains at a club in Sadr City, east of Baghdad.
 ??  ?? Iraqi weightlift­er Roqaya Ahmed, 12, trains at a club in Sadr City, east of Baghdad. — AFP photos
Iraqi weightlift­er Roqaya Ahmed, 12, trains at a club in Sadr City, east of Baghdad. — AFP photos
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