Showing posts with label Iran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iran. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 March 2018

Around the World: India

Around the World is an occasional series celebrating the female bodybuilders of a particular country, and examining any issues peculiar to muscle women there.

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Ashwini Waskar, Mumbai, 2015

Back in June 2015 when reporting on the success of Mumbai's Ashwini Waskar, FMS noted "the odd thing is that this competitor isn't wearing a posing suit but a plain black sports bra and shorts", but if we compare that to what Kerala's Majiziya Bhanu wore for her Bodybuilding debut a couple of weeks ago, Ashwini's outfit seems a lot less odd.



Majiziya, according to journalist Siddhant Pandey, is "a professional powerlifter". As she was returning home from a recent competition, by chance she heard about a local Bodybuilding contest, and, encouraged by her fiancée, decided to give it a go. Her powerlifting coach hastily sent her some pics of the compulsory poses "on WhatsApp", and, amazingly, she won, despite "exposing no skin [other] than her face and hands".

She's "a proud hijab-wearing Bodybuilder", you see.

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Now Pandey's article may be unintentionally hilarious in places. I was quite confident of winning the championship, he reports Bhanu as saying, as I found the other women contestants to be chubby. In other places he makes claims that are simply ludicrous. "She changed the game," he writes, "she will change the way you look at the sport."

No she won't.

But then I did start thinking about the "skin-tight sportswear" she wore on stage "along with her headscarf". I thought about all those places in the world where this would be the only acceptable attire for a woman to wear whatever sporting endeavour she was doing, and I wondered if this really could "change the game" in those countries.

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An Iranian FBB - in private

From places like Iran, where Female Bodybuilding is actually illegal, to places like the UAE, very much at the liberal end of strict Islamic obedience, where the sport isn't exactly discouraged, but there are no female competitors, "skin-tight sportswear along with her headscarf" gives women a way to make contests acceptable to the authorities.

Perhaps the only way.

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Khloud Essam, Egyptian FBB & Personal Trainer

Ashwini Waskar wore what she had to wear to compete. Majiziya Bhuna didn't have to wear her hijab, it was a choice. But inadvertently she may have shown women throughout the Islamic world how they might realise their competitive dreams.

Suddenly, hijab-wearing Female Bodybuilders don't sound so ridiculous after all.

Monday, 30 January 2017

Around the World: Iran

Around the World will be an occasional series celebrating the female bodybuilders of a particular country, and examining any issues peculiar to muscle women there.

Today, from bad to worse in Iran.

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The last time FMS reported from Iran, female bodybuilders were being summoned to court for taking part in an international competition. Some male athletes have trained women and arranged for these half-naked pseudo-athletes to compete in competitions abroad, reported Mizan, the news agency of the Iranian judiciary, in September. Now their semi-nude photographs are everywhere on social networks.

According to IranWire, on October 2, Tehran’s prosecutor, Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, confirmed that the male coaches involved in training two female bodybuilders had been banned from continuing their athletic activities and banned from travelling.

Now it seems one of these women has actually been jailed.

A female bodybuilder was arrested on January 17 after she posted a "semi-nude" photograph of herself on Instagram, according to government sources, and was jailed after she was unable to pay a bail amount of 200m tomans (about $62,000).

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The news was picked up by the Mail Online, who added that, though "unidentified", it is thought she may be Shirin Nobahari, one of the two female bodybuilders who had been banned from bodybuilding as well as travelling outside Iran last September.

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From there, the story went, as these things always seems to do nowadays, global, with the Mail's text repeated almost verbatim, and images of Shirin from her Instagram (@shirin_muscleking), "semi-nude" as the mullahs would tut, for illustration.

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Whether the arrested woman is, in fact, Shirin Nobahari is still - as far as I can ascertain - unconfirmed. On the one hand she has, if anything, toned down her posts somewhat in the last few months, with the only skin on display being that on her striking face. On the the other hand though, she had been warned, and she is still, quite obviously, defying the ban imposed upon her bodybuilding. Furthermore, her Instagram - with its 70,000+ followers and three duplicate "fanpage" accounts (no doubt there as insurance should one or more be shut down) - makes her by far the most high profile Iranian bodybuilder still pumping iron in Iran, and therefore a prime target for a regime obviously keen to set an example to bring others into line.

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This is not the first time Shirin has faced opposition. My parents were university professors, the 27-year-old said in an interview with a dissident Iranian news source at the end of 2015. One of my sisters has a Master’s in Food Sciences and the other sister a Master’s in Physiology. One of my brothers is an inventor and has a few inventions registered to his name. The other two are graduates of Computer Science and Accounting. Unsurprisingly, her parents tried to persuade to follow a similar path into a "good" profession rather than pursuing her passion for muscle.

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She describes herself as a "one-woman army", and compares the authorities to "crows and vultures". She told her Instagram followers last autumn - around the time of her previous collar - that "however we live it is important to live with dignity". What a tragedy if attempting to do so has meant she has been robbed of her freedom.

Tuesday, 11 October 2016

Around the World: Iran

Around the World will be an occasional series celebrating the female bodybuilders of a particular country, and examining any issues peculiar to muscle women there.

Today, we bring you a somewhat depressing update on the situation in Iran.

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Now I guess all of us would like female muscle to gain more mainstream acceptance in our own countries, but the situation for Iranians should remind us that we should perhaps count our blessings a little more often, because the chances are at least female bodybuilding isn't - to all intents and purposes - ILLEGAL where you live.

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The official website of Iranian judiciary reported last week that a number of what it referred to as "half-naked female Iranian pseudo-athletes" have been summoned to court, according to the English-language Iranian Radio Zamaneh.

Their crime? Participating in a bodybuilding competition.

Naturally this competition didn't take place in Iran, where female bodybuilding is considered - even (officially) by the Iranian Bodybuilding Federation - to be "at odds with the values of the Islamic Republic and the dignity of women".

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You couldn't make it up.

It's all about the Islamic Republic's enforcement of the so-called "Islamic" dress code for women. Basically, any activity that requires them to shed the hijab is forbidden.

Even if the shedding takes place outside Iran.

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In a series of interviews with Iranian FBBs after the announcement of the charges, dissident news source Shahrvand reported that five years ago as many as six women were fined and had their passports confiscated as they attempted to travel to Dubai to take part in a fitness competition. Now the situation seems even more precarious.

Iranian women who have chosen to participate internationally can no longer return to the country, according to "Samira", a female bodybuilder of 38 who has been training for 18 years and works as a coach in Tehran. "Neda", another Iranian FBB, is currently planning to escape and compete in the US. She told Shahrvand that there is no place for women’s bodybuilding or even physical fitness in Iran.

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The national bodybuilding federation is (quite understandably) towing the official line, pleading that they were ignorant of the women travelling abroad, suspending the four coaches involved, and promising not only to abide by the judges' decision on the matter, but also to impose its own disciplinary sanctions on the women.

And yet...

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Iranian women still defiantly go to the gyms (that will have them) and build muscle.

Their bodies, you might say, are their protest.

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And I'd tell you who they were if I wasn't so worried that some spook of the Islamic Republic might be reading these very words, but one place you can find some still pumping up in Iran is the Iranian Muscle Girls Society on Facebook.

Monday, 20 January 2014

Around the World: IRAN

Around the World will be an occasional series celebrating the female bodybuilders of a particular country, and examining any issues peculiar to muscle women there.

Our very first post in the series looks at Iran.

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Remember Shiva Bagheri? She was a fitness competitor in the early-ish days of fitness. If the name is unfamiliar, perhaps the body will jog your memory...

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In fact, Shiva is an LA native and these days runs her own dance studios in West Hollywood, Shiva's Dance and Fitness. She was neither born nor has she ever lived in Iran. And as such, Shiva is the archetypal Iranian/Persian muscle woman.

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She is one of the estimated four or five million people of Iranian descent or birth who live outside of the country, part of the Iranian diaspora that has largely been created by emigration from the country in the wake of the 1979 Revolution that brought about the establishment of a theocratic political system there.

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Ania Anvaryfar (left) and Mona Porsaleh (right), for example, are both based in Toronto, where the Poursaleh family settled after moving away from Iran in 2002.

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Sheida Tehrani was born in Tehran but now lives in Kuala Lumpar, where she earns her living as a personal trainer and fitness competitor.

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Sashli Amirfatemi Stjärnqvist (left) and Salomeh Adham (right) are both women of Iranian descent who now build up their muscles in Sweden.

You can also find the Iranian diaspora represented in the sport of Crossfit.

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Azadeh Boroumand emigrated to Canada with her family in the late '80s.

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Now a US resident, she decided to sit out the Games last year, citing the physical, mental and emotional toll that qualifying had taken on her.

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However, she does plan to compete again in 2014.

'Azadeh' means 'freedom' in Farsi, something that is in short supply in Iran, especially where women are concerned. This is, after all, a society in which a cleric can stand in front of a crowd and quite confidently proclaim that 'women who do not dress modestly lead young men astray and spread adultery in society, which increases earthquakes'. Yep. You read that right. Immodest dress = Adultery = Earthquakes. Adultery incurs the wrath of Allah, and it's Allah who makes earthquakes you see.

In such a climate, it's not surprising that it's hard to find out much about female bodybuilders, or indeed any female sportswomen, who are Iranian and still in Iran. Female athletes, for example, must wear hijabs when they compete, and are consequently largely absent from international competition.

However, via France24's Observers series, one Iranian female bodybuilder has dared to speak out about her life, her sport, and the difficulties she has in her country.

Step forward, Soudabeh Sabour.

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Until recently, she says, Iranian women weren’t really interested in bodybuilding, mainly because of the way they dress – when you wear Islamic dress, you don’t really care what your body looks like underneath. But with the advent of foreign channels on satellite TV, Iranian women have been awakened and getting their body in good shape has become more important for them.

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Soudabeh works as a personal trainer (for women only, obviously) in a Tehran gym, and claims to have over 150 clients, although only 5 or 6 of them really want to achieve a professional bodybuilder’s body definition; the others want to stop when they get just a little muscle. As in most places, maybe all, muscular definition on women is not regarded as desirable in Iranian society. Sometimes strangers or even my own friends make fun of me, Soudabeh says, in perhaps the only instance of shared experience she has with women elsewhere in the world! However, in Iran, there is much much more than the odd comment to contend with.

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We can’t hold competitions, even women-only ones, Soudabeh says. And it's not for want of trying. I did ask the national bodybuilding federation [men-only] for permission to hold a competition, but was rejected. Gym owners refuse to host 'underground' unsanctioned competitions for fear of recriminations from the authorities if caught. There are, however, rumours that 'virtual contests' take place via social media, although FMS has had no luck in trying to confirm that this is the case.

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I hope we will one day be allowed to organize real competitions, says Soudabeh, or else I fear there may be no future for women’s bodybuilding in Iran.

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It's a depressing thought. The talent the country has is clear to see from the women of Iranian origin who have prospered in more accommodating climates. However, given Soudabeh Sabour's tenacity in the face of almost unimaginable obstacles, perhaps all is not lost for female muscle in Iran after all.

Not yet, anyway.

You can follow Iranian Muscle Girl's Society on Facebook to keep up with Iranian muscle women, inside and outside the country, and show your support for Soudabeh.