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Author Topic: Iran's role model and inspiration - on skis  (Read 240 times)
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BrankoWasTheBEST
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« on: February 24, 2010, 09:41:03 AM »


The first Iranian woman to take part in the Winter Olympics says she hopes she will be able to inspire Muslim women all over the world to get involved in sport.

Marjan Kalhor has overcome conservative opposition to her participation in the games by wearing a headscarf under her skiing helmet.

High in the Alborz mountains north of the sprawling city of Tehran lies Dizin, the centre of the country's skiing industry.

Although skiing is popular in Iran, a lack of investment in the resort has left it with outdated ski lifts and little modern skiing infrastructure.

But that hasn't stopped the rise to fame of Ms Kalhor - who has already made history.

This week the 21-year-old is thousands of miles away in Vancouver preparing for her debut in the Winter Olympics.

When she lines up on Wednesday to cross the start line of the giant slalom, she will be the first Iranian woman to ever participate in the games.

While nobody is expecting her to win a medal, she says she has already achieved her greatest ambition by participating, and she hopes it will encourage other Iranian women.

"The number of women who are interested in skiing is increasing fast. And I'm so happy about that," she says.

"The next generation and my own, are thinking about competing, not just having fun.

"And one of the reasons I'm so happy about being here is to be a role model for all of them."

This is easier said than done in a country where the participation of women in sport is for the most part seen as incompatible with Islam.


She acknowledges the issue but says it has not prevented her from pursuing her dream.

"People are different. Some people don't know how precious it is to be a winner or a competitor," she says.

"I try not to listen to them."

Back in Dizin however, Iranians are unlikely to be able to watch Marjan and her three Iranian team mates in action.

As with the summer Olympics, coverage on Iranian television has been sporadic at best.

But if some have questioned her participation, many more will be cheering her on and hoping against all the odds for an Olympic medal returning to Iran.

BBC

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... In Persia first arises that light which shines itself and illuminates what is around... The principle of development begins with the history of Persia; this constitutes therefore the begining of history.             Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
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« Reply #1 on: February 25, 2010, 04:07:49 PM »



PTV - Iran’s first female Olympic skier Marjan Kalhor has said she was pleased with her performance following her debut on the slopes.

“I am very happy to finish the course, because I am the first woman from Iran to compete at a Winter Olympic Games,” Kalhor told reporters after she finished her giant slalom first run at the Vancouver Winter Olympic Games in one minute 36.87 seconds on Wednesday.

“The course was very difficult and I’m very tired, because it’s my first big competition,” she added.

The 21-year-old Iranian skier trailed leader Elisabeth Goergl of Austria by 21.75 seconds in the fogbound, snowy course.

Kalhor, wearing a pink head scarf beneath her safety helmet to comply with the Islamic dress code, further expressed hope to inspire other Iranian women to take part in major sporting events for their country.

“All female athletes want to compete at the big competitions; I hope more do so,” she went on to say.

Carrying the Iranian flag at the opening ceremony of the Vancouver Games, Kalhor is the first woman to represent Iran in the Winter Olympics.

The Iranian athlete took up skiing at the age of four and decided to take the sport more seriously after winning a national youth games race at age 11. She grew up in a family of skiers in Dizin, a popular Iranian ski resort north of Tehran.

The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games or the 21st Winter Olympics, is being held February 12-28 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

It is the third Winter Olympics hosted by Canada, and the first by the province of British Columbia.
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