A new USA Boxing exemption has been unveiled which means
Zafar can adhere to her religious beliefs rather than to a mandate that she
wears a sleeveless jersey and shorts that cannot go below the knees.
she is a 16-year-old Muslim-American boxer, who wants to
compete at the Tokyo Olympics in 2020, has won the right to wear a hijab and
fully cover her arms and legs while boxing in the US.
Amaiya Zafar, from Oakdale, Minnesota, no longer will have
to choose between her religion or the boxing ring after she recently won a
battle that will allow her to wear a hijab and fully cover her arms and legs
while taking part in bouts in the US.
“This is a big step. She’s put a lot of labour into this.
She earned the right to showcase her skills, and I’m happy for her,” her coach
Nathaniel Haile was quoted as saying. “But it’s just the first step in letting
her achieve her dreams,” Haile said.
Zafar has her sights set on the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. To
get there, she would have to persuade the international boxing organisation —
the International Boxing Association (AIBA) — to allow her to box in her modest
attire, the report said.
For now, her right to wear the scarf is only with USA
Boxing, it said. Zafar will now have the opportunity to fight in local matches
and many tournaments throughout the country, Haile said. Zafar, who is relieved
she can finally compete, said, “I’m ready”.
Over the past couple of years, she thought she was close to
jumping into competition. Last year, she flew to Florida and weighed in for her
fight. But before she got her gloves on, officials informed her that she could
not wear her hijab, leggings or long sleeves, and she left.
“You get so invested. My weight is in the right place. My
head is in the game,” she said. To be turned away -- “it’s exhausting,” Zafar
added.
On April 29, the 5-foot-1, 116-pound teen expects to face
off with a girl from Iowa at an amateur boxing match at the Richard Green
Central Park School in Minneapolis.
Her mother, Sarah O’Keefe, is more excited than nervous,
pointing to her daughter’s training and skills.“(Amaiya) has wanted this for so
long,” O’Keefe said.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) had
repeatedly called for the Switzerland-based AIBA and USA Boxing to grant a
religious exemption to uniform regulations so that Zafar could wear hijab
during competition.
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