Yahoo – AFP,
Abhaya Srivastava, 14 Oct 2014
Indian
athlete Dutee Chand, 18, banned for failing a "gender test", is
hoping
her fight will spare others the same fate (AFP Photo/Asit Kumar)
|
A teenage
Indian sprinter who was banned from international competition for failing a
"gender test" is hoping her fight against rules on sexual identity
will spare others the same fate.
Dutee
Chand, 18, said she has suffered trauma and embarrassment, but her challenge in
the Court of Arbitration for Sport could change controversial rules set by
athletics' world governing body.
Chand, the
daughter of weavers who was brought up in rural poverty, had her promising
career turned upside down when she was barred from this year's Commonwealth
Games after showing elevated levels of testosterone.
Indian
athlete Dutee Chand, 18, hopes her
public stand against "unethical"
sexual
identity rules will spur others to fight (AFP
Photo/Asit Kumar)
|
Chand was
diagnosed with hyperandrogenism, a condition which produces high testosterone
levels and meant she fell foul of the International Association of Athletics
Federation's (IAAF) gender rules.
They were
introduced after the IAAF's struggles with the case of South African runner
Caster Semenya, who was banned but later reinstated following investigations into
her gender.
The rules
are intended to stop women competing with high levels of testosterone, which is
known to increase strength and muscle mass.
But critics
have challenged the science involved, saying the link between testosterone and
performance is unclear, and that testing is arbitrary and psychologically
damaging.
"I was
told I must undergo surgery or take hormonal treatment if I wanted to salvage
my career. I was stunned to hear all this," Chand said by telephone from
Bhubaneshwar, in her home state of Orissa.
"It's
so cruel. God has made me the way I am. I don't want to change anything and I
also don't want to give up sports."
The IAAF
told AFP it would not comment on the case, which is expected to be decided
within the next six months.
But the
body said its regulations were meant "to uphold competitive equality"
rather than question gender.
"The
IAAF regulation is based on extensive international expertise in both ethics
and medical science," Chris Turner of the IAAF communications department
said in an email to AFP.
'It's so
humiliating'
Chand is
the first to challenge the gender rules, but she is not the only Indian athlete
to be caught up in similar circumstances.
Santhi
Soundarajan was stripped of her 800m silver medal from the 2006 Asian Games
after being forced to undergo invasive and humiliating gender verification
tests -- a devastating turn of events that drove her to attempt suicide.
Pinki
Pramanik, who retired in 2007 after winning a team gold in the 4x400m relay at
the same Asian Games, was accused of being a man and raping her housemate in
2012.
Indian
sprinter Dutee Chand, 18, hopes
her public stand will spur others to fight
against
"unethical" sexual identity rules
(AFP Photo/Asit Kumar)
|
Chand said
journalists had bombarded her parents with questions like: "Is she a boy
or a girl?", and "Does she have periods?"
"Can
you imagine what me and my family are going through? It's so humiliating,"
she said.
With help
from a researcher on gender and sports, Chand decided to fight her case and
last month she filed an appeal with the sports arbitration court in
Switzerland.
"The
officials are also supporting me in my fight. I now feel the whole country is
behind me," she said.
"I
just hope and pray that my case sets a precedent so that others like me don't
have to suffer the kind of trauma I am going through."
Chand
enrolled in a national training programme in 2006, and with the prize money she
won in athletic meets she earned enough to move her family to a four-room house
in the city.
She can
take heart from Semenya, who was initially stripped of her 800m world title but
carried her country's flag at the opening of the 2012 Olympics, where she won
800m silver.
"It's
heartening to know there are other women like me," said Chand. "I
want people to respect me for who I am. I don't want to be scrutinised and
ridiculed for no fault of mine."
Related Article:
"The Akashic Circle" – Jul 17, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Religion, The Humanization of God, Benevolent Design, DNA, Akashic Circle, (Old) Souls, Gaia, Indigenous People, Talents, Reincarnation, Genders, Gender Switches, In “between” Gender Change, Gender Confusion, Shift of Human Consciousness, Global Unity,..... etc.) - (Text version)
“… Gender Switching
Old souls, let me tell you something. If you are old enough, and many of you are, you have been everything. Do you hear me? All of you. You have been both genders. All of you have been what I will call between genders, and that means that all of you have had gender switches. Do you know what happens when it's time for you to switch a gender? We have discussed it before. You'll have dozens of lifetimes as the same gender. You're used to it. It's comfortable. You cannot conceive of being anything else, yet now it's time to change. It takes approximately three lifetimes for you to get used to it, and in those three lifetimes, you will have what I call "gender confusion."
It isn't confusion at all. It's absolutely normal, yet society often will see it as abnormal. I'm sitting here telling you you've all been through it. All of you. That's what old souls do. It's part of the system. …”
Old souls, let me tell you something. If you are old enough, and many of you are, you have been everything. Do you hear me? All of you. You have been both genders. All of you have been what I will call between genders, and that means that all of you have had gender switches. Do you know what happens when it's time for you to switch a gender? We have discussed it before. You'll have dozens of lifetimes as the same gender. You're used to it. It's comfortable. You cannot conceive of being anything else, yet now it's time to change. It takes approximately three lifetimes for you to get used to it, and in those three lifetimes, you will have what I call "gender confusion."
It isn't confusion at all. It's absolutely normal, yet society often will see it as abnormal. I'm sitting here telling you you've all been through it. All of you. That's what old souls do. It's part of the system. …”
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