“I can lift a boy up.”
-Amna Al Haddad, weightlifter
(via theuncolonizedmind)
“I can lift a boy up.”
-Amna Al Haddad, weightlifter
(via theuncolonizedmind)
YES! Finally FIFA gets medical approval that women can wear the hijab and be safe while playing soccer #right2wear. We are one step closer to the ban lift being fully ratified.
By Meera Sethi (thanks hinduthug)
“We are like sisters and we run every competition together”
- Gamze Bulut on Turkish teammate Asli Cakir Alptekin
They won gold and silver at the European Championships in the 1500m (left), and then came and repeated their 1-2 finish at the London 2012 Olympic Games (right). Cakir’s gold medal is Turkey’s first athletics Olympic gold.
(Photos: Zimbio, Reuters, Cumhuriyet News)
(Source: troymedia.com, via kawrage)
Aliya Mustafina congratulates/consoles Viktoria Komova and then looks at the scores for her after a great floor routine by Komova in the all around finals that they both know will most likely not be enough to catch up to the front-runner and eventual champion Gabby Douglas.
Egypt’s fencer Eman Gaber trains in the ExCeL center at the London 2012 Olympics, Thursday, July 26, 2012. (AP)
(Source: meenerhabi)
I think this deserves a standing ovation in front of the mainstream feminists who have constantly dehumanized and demeaned our existence as Muslim women by suggesting that we’re oppressed people. This deserves a standing ovation in front of the hundreds of men who have claimed that the religion of Islam does not tolerate liberated and free women (which is, of course, contrary to the teachings of Muhammad). This deserves recognition; Muslim women are participating in wrestling, swimming, shooting, and other physically demanding sports while wearing the physical hijab.
All of you are my role models; go kick me some misogynistic ass ladies!
Aliya Mustafina
(Source: monkeyknifefight)
Palestinian Olympic runners Worood Maslaha fixes her hijab and Bahaa al-Farra combs his hair before their training sessions in the West Bank and Gaza in the build up to the Olympic Games in London. Some of these athletes come from humble backgrounds, and don’t have high-tech sports centres, equipment, monitoring devices or teams of experts observing their progress, as other competing nations do. Bahaa al-Farra was donated sportswear to train in.
May the odds be ever in their favour, and may their hard work and dedication pay off!
Photos via Reuters
(Source: meenerhabi, via azaadi)
+ Woman athletes in the Olympics