Two of them, Bahrain's Al Ghasara and veiled Iranian rower Homa Hosseini, won the honor of being flag bearers for their countries at the opening ceremony's parade of athletes.
"The hijab has never been a problem for me. In Bahrain you grow up with it," said Al Ghasara, wearing a white baseball cap over a black veil that covers her hair and neck. Her baggy running gear exposes only her face and hands.
"There are more women in sport all the time from countries like Qatar and Kuwait. You can choose to wear the hijab or not. For me it's liberating," added Al Ghasara, whose close-fitting running veils come in red or white, the Bahraini colors. |
Proud to be Muslim This year an unprecedented half a dozen Egyptian athletes, three Iranians, an Afghan and a Yemeni will compete with covered heads like Al Ghasara. They say they want to inspire other women in their countries to break away from Muslim stereotypes.
"People see us wearing the scarf and think we ride camels. But Muslim women can do anything they want," said El Gammal, a bubbly 28-year-old whose sister will compete in the same event, also wearing Islamic head cover.
"When I fence I'm proud that I'm a Muslim. It's very symbolic for women in my country," El Gammal told Reuters.
Beijing's athletes' village has laid on halal food for the hundreds of Muslims staying there, but it only has a mosque for men, despite scores of Muslim women, mostly bare-headed, from countries such as Tunisia, Iran and Pakistan.
The Gulf nations of United Arab Emirates and Oman have sent women athletes to the 2008 Olympics for the first time. Three Iranian women, in headscarves, will compete in rowing, taekwondo and archery. Afghanistan has veiled sprinter Robina Muqimyar running the 100 meters.
Al Ghasara, 25, was the first Bahrain-born athlete to strike gold on the international circuit and won the first female medal at the West Asian Games when it opened up to women in 2005. With a volley of wins, she broke down barriers to women in sport in Bahrain, where many wear the hijab.
At the Olympics, she hopes to help quash the perception among many in the West that the veil is akin to repression: "We have women who are ambassadors, doctors, pilots," said the runner, who prays daily in her athletes' village bedroom and has a weakness for red nail varnish and shopping.
"I haven't been criticized at home, and at the Olympics race or religion is irrelevant, we're all just here to do sport." |