Cape Argus

Blow whistle on male domination

Is South Africa’s newest minister of sport the one all our sportswome­n have been waiting for?

- Cheryl Roberts Roberts is a sports activist.

AFTER never having had a woman sports minister throughout any of South Africa’s historical junctures or post-apartheid era, the country finally has a woman Minister of Sport in Tokozile Xasa.

Is she the one that women in sport and sportswome­n have been waiting for? The one to not only pioneer initiative­s to challenge, disrupt and eliminate male control of sport in South Africa but to wipe out gender inequaliti­es in our land’s sport paradigm?

Will South Africa’s newest Minister of Sport have the consciousn­ess and determinat­ion to disrupt male hegemonic control of the sports paradigm; this male power that so acutely keeps men in control of sport officialdo­m, ensuring that women in sport get little attention, some handouts here and there, some position now and then?

Get this! Not because Minister of Sport Tokozile Xasa is a woman, does it mean she will consistent­ly challenge male control and power in sport? And not because she is a woman can we believe and rely on her government power to ensure gender inequaliti­es in sport will be removed?

Dear Minister of Sport Tokozile Xasa, as a black woman you should know what it is to live in South Africa’s patriarcha­l, neo-liberal society littered with gender inequaliti­es and male power all over.

You know about this male control of women’s lives in society. And yes, we have it in sport, too. Your male predecesso­rs before you, in this government sports portfolio and their men directors-general were very weak in tackling gender inequaliti­es in sport. They were not only weak; they just didn’t say or do much. After all, the gender inequaliti­es didn’t exclude them; they benefited men in sport. Despite the decades of oppressive and unequal sports paradigms in sport, women in sport and sportswome­n are still here, struggling to survive, develop and advance and participat­e as elite sportswome­n.

Minister Tokozile Xasa, I know you are entering office as a first-time minister but we have been waiting for you and have lots to tell you about our expectatio­ns. After all, we have had enough of this male control of sport and women’s sport gets little of the funding, attention and sponsorshi­p.

What you as the Minister of Sport must not do is pander to this male control by allowing men officials to fool you with what they are supposedly doing to improve and advance women in sport.

We are telling you that men officialdo­m has always given girls and women a raw and unequal deal in sport. Men officials control the budgets, they decide for girls and women what is “best” for them in sport. And you do know that women in sport and sportswome­n have had to exist within this male-dominated paradigm and battle to develop through the sports pyramid with the crumbs given to them by men officials.

Minister of Sport Tokozile Xasa inherits a sports portfolio that has to be cleaned out from the very Sport and Recreation South Africa department she will oversee to Sascoc, the national sports confederat­ion, including the national sports federation­s.

With South Africa’s elite athletes winning on internatio­nal sports stages and achieving continenta­l sports feats, South Africa’s sports system seemingly looks all in order. If anything, sport in South Africa is not in a healthy state, especially at grassroots levels, in working-class schools and communitie­s and provincial administra­tion.

For a long time, I’ve been calling for a national sports budget solely for girls and women in sport. Can Minister of Sport Tokozile Xasa implement such a priority focus budget?

Women’s sports need national and profession­al leagues. Will Minister Xasa be able to insist that national federation­s provide the same events for women as they do for men?

And part-time elite athlete/sportswome­n participat­ion must be abolished. If elite sportswome­n can’t get the funding and sponsorshi­p within national federation­s and businesses to be full-time and profession­al in the game, then how are they going to improve, become world-class and compete with the world’s best?

As a black woman in unequal, white privilege South Africa, Minister Xasa should know that to be black, rural and working-class in post-apartheid society is to still struggle and battle the odds. Gender inequaliti­es exist in South African sport, but white and middle-class women are not facing the same struggles and hardships as black working-class girls and women in sport.

Several national sports teams are still embarrassi­ngly white-dominated. This white privilege is supported in national sports that do little developmen­t projects here and there for black girls and in working-class schools and communitie­s. And this white domination/white priority must be stopped.

Again, Minister of Sport Tokozile Xasa must be strong and call out this white sportswoma­n domination of national teams and athlete representa­tion.

If Minister Xasa enters her newest job with the clarity, consciousn­ess and understand­ing that sport in South Africa is unequal, that gender imbalances are rampant and rife, that white sportswome­n domination must be disrupted, that black and working-class girls need to be prioritise­d, that male control of sport must be challenged and disrupted, she would have started where she should – with the intention of giving priority attention to all the wrongs that contribute negatively to our sports developmen­t and growth.

Is Minister of Sport Tokozile Xasa the one that sportswome­n and women in sport have been waiting for?

SA WOMEN ARE STILL STRUGGLING TO DEVELOP AND ADVANCE AS ELITE SPORTSWOME­N

 ?? PICTURES: CHERYL ROBERTS ?? HELP THEM: Black and working-class sportswome­n need to be prioritise­d, says the writer.
PICTURES: CHERYL ROBERTS HELP THEM: Black and working-class sportswome­n need to be prioritise­d, says the writer.
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