22/07/2020
22/07/2020
They love the sport and dare to dream big
KABUL, Afghanistan, July 22, (AP): A year and a half ago, Liqa Esazada for the first time stepped into a martial arts club for women in Kabul, something of a rarity in this still deeply conservative Muslim society. At the time, she had just accompanied her older sister but was immediately intrigued.
The 22-year-old is now one of two dozen Afghan women who find inspiration and empowerment in Japanese Jiu-Jitsu, a martial arts form that dates back centuries.
They love the sport and dare to dream big, hoping someday to compete on the international level. In war-torn Afghanistan, where gender discrimination has deep cultural and historical roots and where many women suffer from domestic violence, Jiu-Jitsu seems an ideal sport for women. It teaches self-defense against a stronger and heavier opponent by using certain holds and principles of leverage. Esazada said she wants to show a more positive side of Afghanistan – and “become famous and win the world Jiu-Jitsu championship medal.”
Sayed Jawad Hussiani, a Jiu-Jitsu instructor at the Nero club where Esazada trains, said this martial arts form with roots in feudal Japan was first brought to Afghanistan in 2005 but has since become popular among boys and girls alike. The women in Hussiani’s group find strength in their team spirit. They braid each other’s hair before training sessions, spar against one another, take turns on the even bars. In winter, they practice their wrestle holds on snowcovered hilltops above Kabul.
Memory
Today, about two-thirds of Afghanistan’s population is 25 or younger and Esazada said she has no memory of the Taleban regime, which hosted al- Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and ruled Afghanistan before the 2001 US invasion. But since the United States and the Taleban earlier this year signed a deal on ending America’s longest war – an accord that also envisages peace talks between the Taleban and the Kabul government – women in Afghanistan have become increasingly worried about losing some of the rights and freedoms they have gained over the past two decades.
Under the Taleban, women were not allowed to go to school, work outside the home or leave their house without a male escort. And though they still face many challenges, Afghan women are increasingly stepping into their own power in this male-dominated society, finding a voice even in sports. Esazada said she is not afraid of the Taleban, and if they come back, she would simply “continue my training to reach my dreams.” She looks to Afghan women athletes who have made their mark on the world stage. Female athletes from Afghanistan have won more than 100 medals at regional and international tournaments. Tahmina Kohistani, Afghanistan’s first female Olympic athlete, competed in the 100-meter run at the 2012 London Olympics. In 2010, the Afghan female soccer team defeated Pakistan 4-0 at the South Asian Football Championship
. In 2011, Afghan female power lifters won three gold and two bronze medals at pan-Asian games held in Kazakhstan. Esazada’s fellow Jiu-Jitsu student at the Nero club, Rana Rasuli, 21, said she worries about her future if the Taleban manage to retake all of Afghanistan. For now, Rasuli said she is happiest when she can come out of her home and exercise with the other girls at the club.