Assmaah Helal has broken barriers to reach soccer’s elite, but a controversial FIFA ban on Muslim women playing in the hijab means she might never realize her dream of wearing the Australian jersey.
Helal, 25, was introduced to soccer by her Egyptian-born father when she was just five years old and she was determined not to let gender keep her from joining her three brothers on the pitch.
It was no easy task. Members of her Muslim community in western Sydney frowned on the idea of girls playing sport at all, much less a rough-and-tumble game which was, at that time, still very much a male domain.
Photo: AFP
“I used to just get told I was a tomboy. In my culture, to play with the guys and to mix with guys was seen as not appropriate,” Helal said.
Helal now plays in the Super League, one step below Australia’s premier W-League for women, and says representing Australia in the national side, the Matildas, would be her ultimate dream.
However, devout Muslim beliefs which see her don the hijab to play every weekend mean — for now — such a dream is out of reach.
FIFA banned players from wearing the Islamic headscarf in 2007, claiming it is unsafe, but Helal has never once experienced or heard of a hijab-related injury and has joined growing calls for the ban to be overturned.
“I strongly believe that the ban is just outright discrimination,” she said of the headscarf, which she described as “a part of a Muslim woman’s identity which cannot be changed.”
“At an international and an elite level, sports like taekwondo and rugby allow the headscarf to be worn during the competitive matches and for the world game, for the universal language that is football, to ban the headscarf ... it doesn’t make sense,” she said.
The Asian Football Confederation (AFC) is leading the charge for soccer’s lawmaking body, the International Football Association Board (IFAB), to lift the ban when it meets tomorrow.
It has become a pressing issue in the region, with Iran’s national women’s team forced to withdraw from the West Asia Olympic qualifiers last year and three players dropping out of the Jordanian side because of the ban.
AFC vice-president Moya Dodd said the safety concerns had been “fully addressed” by new designs with a velcro front-seam to prevent strangulation and it was a baseless reason to exclude “hundreds of millions” of Muslim women.
“Football, it’s the fastest-growing sport in Asia and it’s important that people can play also knowing that they can compete at the top level,” Dodd said.
“Sport is the field of dreams. If you take away the dream of playing in an Olympics or playing in a World Cup, then it will have an effect all the way down the line,” he added.
Melissa Barbieri, captain of the Matildas and one of Australia’s best-known female soccer players, said she had seen great Muslim players “and it scares me to think they won’t be able to play for Australia one day because of religion.”
“We already have so many obstacles in the way of getting equal opportunity in the football world, mostly due to stereotypes and lack of knowledge,” she said, urging FIFA to see the soccer players behind the hijab.
“If you just see some of these girls’ skills you would feel obliged to overturn the ban. It would send a thorough ‘Football is the World Game’ message,” Barbieri added.
Sydney sisters Hiba and Hala Ayache, 24 and 26, have been campaigning for nine years to win acceptance of their all-female “Lakembaroos” soccer club in the local Muslim community and they see the ban as a slap in the face.
“You’re taking it all away, all our hard work,” said Hiba, who has played at state representative level and, like Helal, has international dreams.
“We all have the potential, we have the skills to play further. So it’s not only the boundaries of our family and the community, it also becomes international now. It’s a bit of a burden on us,” she said.
Dodd said only that she’s “hopeful” of having a fair hearing over the ban at the meeting of IFAB, which comprises four members from FIFA and four from British associations.
“I’d like to see a way enabling women with particular cultural beliefs to participate, rather than see it as ground for exclusion,” she said.
“The field should be a field of cultural exchange rather than conflict,” Dodd added.
Freddie Freeman homered and drove in four runs, Shohei Ohtani also went deep and Roki Sasaki earned his first major league win as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Atlanta Braves 10-3 on Saturday night for their seventh straight victory. The Dodgers have won the first two games of the series to improve to 5-0 against Atlanta this year. Los Angeles’ three-game sweep at home early in the season left the Braves 0-7. Sasaki allowed three runs and six hits over five innings. The 23-year-old right-hander gave up a home run to Ozzie Albies, but received plenty of offensive support in his
Bayern Munich on Sunday were crowned German champions for the 34th time, giving striker Harry Kane his first major trophy, after second-placed Bayer 04 Leverkusen drew 2-2 at SC Freiburg. Bayern’s 3-3 draw at RB Leipzig on Saturday, when the Bavarians came from two goals down to take the lead before conceding a stoppage-time equalizer, meant defending Bundesliga champions Leverkusen needed to win at Freiburg to delay the title party. Leverkusen were two goals down before scoring twice in the final 10 minutes, but Xabi Alonso’s side could not find a third, as Bayern reclaimed the title at the first attempt after
Shuttler Lin Chun-yi yesterday kept Taiwan on the board as they faced their first major challenge of the group stage after marching into the last eight at the Sudirman Cup Finals in Xiamen, China. Taiwan were losing 3-1 to South Korea as of press time last night, with only the men’s doubles match remaining. Taiwan and four-time champions South Korea have already progressed to the quarter-finals, after Taiwan on Monday blanked the Czech Republic 5-0 without giving up a single game. Before last night’s tie, Taiwan were undefeated in Group B, with a 9-1 match record, ahead of South Korea, who, although also
A man fell from the 6.4m-high Clemente Wall in right field at PNC Park in Pittsburgh during Wednesday night’s game between the Pirates and the Chicago Cubs. Right after Andrew McCutchen hit a two-run double in the seventh inning to put the Pirates ahead 4-3, players began waving frantically for medical personnel and pointing to the man, who had fallen onto the warning track. The fan was tended to for approximately five minutes by members of both the Pirates and Cubs training staffs as well as PNC personnel before being removed from the field on a cart. The team issued a statement shortly