Manawatu Standard

Aggrieved athlete hammers home her point

- Ed Pells and Pat Graham

As it turns out, the hard part for US Olympian Gwen Berry hasn’t started yet. The raised fist at the Pan-am Games last summer, along with the public shaming she received from Olympic authoritie­s afterward, and the wonderingw­hat might happen if she were to use her platform at the nowpostpon­ed Tokyo Games to protest racial injustice – that seems easy now.

‘‘I feel like, right now, my body and my mind, it’s like I’m going to war,’’ Berry told The Associated Press this week. ‘‘I’m trying so hard to protect something that is near and dear tome.’’

Berry is the African-american hammer thrower – the mother of a 16-year-old son – who captured headlines last yearwhen she used her turn on the gold-medal podium at the Pan-am Games to raise her fist as a show of her frustratio­nwith America’s treatment of blacks.

Her gesture, followed by the punishment that came afterward, is being seen in a new light these days, after the killing of George Floyd – a tragedy that sparked protests across the US while also compelling hundreds of commission­ers, leagues and players in the sports world to respond.

To Berry, the statement from the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee – that the federation ‘‘stands with those who demand equality’’ – was galling. It came less than a year after the USOPC put Berry on a 12-month probation for her gesture at the Pan-am Games. The letter chief executive Sarah Hirshland sent Berry that day said thatwhile she respected Berry’s perspectiv­e ‘‘I disagree with the moment and manner in which you chose to express your views.’’

‘‘I want an apology letter .. mailed .. just like you and the IOC MAILEDME WHENYOU PUTME ON PROBATION,’’ Berry tweeted shortly after the USOPC sent out its letter this week. Later, she amended her demand and said she wanted a public apology.

The USOPC has not yet responded publicly to Berry’s requests; nor did officials there immediatel­y answer emails from AP seeking comment. The episode comes against the backdrop of the IOC statement earlier this year that reiterated rules forbidding the types of protests Berry made.

In her AP interview, she said she was disappoint­ed with the USOPC: ‘‘I feel like for them to post something like that without first apologisin­g . . . it takes away their sincerity to the situation at

Gwen Berry on her fight for racial justice hand,’’ Berry said.

And yet, in Berry’s view, the back and forth with the USOPC is the least of the problems facing her or her country, as the US heads into the second week of protests in reaction to Floyd’s death.

Berry said she heard a lot of people’s feelingswh­ile joining recent protests in Houston. She says the endless stream of stories of police brutality levelled against blacks in America keep her in a constant state of worry about her son and her brothers.

‘‘I have a child who is a blackman, who does not look like a child,’’ she said. ‘‘I have siblings who are blackmen who do not look like children. They’re big. They can be intimidati­ng. I’m in fear for their lives right now. I feel like I’m fighting for them right now.’’

She’s been inspired by former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick, who ultimately lost his job after kneeling during the national anthem in 2016 to protest police brutality and racial injustice.

‘‘My hero,’’ Berry said. ‘‘A person who looks like me, stands for what I stand for and believes inwhat I believe in. He’s a leader.’’

Asked if she was hopeful the protests could be an impetus for change, Berry said she looked at it as a ‘‘tipping point’’.

‘‘I don’t think this is the thing that’s going to bring America together,’’ she added. ‘‘The people who run the system, they’re not going to just let this one situation be the tipping point. They’re going to fight until they can’t fight anymore. So we will have a lot of fights to do. This is the start. This is a key moment.’’

When Berry raised her fist during The Star-spangled Banner last summer, her messagewas not all that different from the one sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos delivered at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, when they raised their fists on the podium. They became internatio­nally known for their fight to shed light on their country’s history of social injustice for blacks.

At that time, Berry didn’t really have any follow-up plans in mind. Now, she does. Her probation will be over in the summer of 2021 – the new date for the Tokyo Games.‘‘i’m prepared to take my platform to the next level. I really don’t know how I will go about that, because I know just speaking out and posting is not enough,’’ Berry said.

‘‘Being more involved and helping my message reach bigger influencer­s, I think thatwill help me a lot.’’ AP

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