The Prague Post - Iran girls kick down social barriers with karate

EUR -
AED 4.307902
AFN 77.457681
ALL 96.697105
AMD 446.986618
ANG 2.100169
AOA 1075.655078
ARS 1729.90417
AUD 1.753648
AWG 2.112893
AZN 1.998782
BAM 1.955741
BBD 2.361329
BDT 143.345709
BGN 1.955069
BHD 0.442987
BIF 3467.896179
BMD 1.173015
BND 1.508255
BOB 8.101457
BRL 6.361382
BSD 1.172165
BTN 105.635838
BWP 16.37951
BYN 3.443297
BYR 22991.091701
BZD 2.357429
CAD 1.611312
CDF 2575.941107
CHF 0.928366
CLF 0.027107
CLP 1063.408836
CNY 8.203891
CNH 8.175621
COP 4419.86768
CRC 583.182541
CUC 1.173015
CUP 31.084894
CVE 110.261699
CZK 24.166575
DJF 208.733751
DKK 7.476332
DOP 73.947786
DZD 152.419437
EGP 56.046322
ERN 17.595223
ETB 182.177846
FJD 2.674596
FKP 0.870358
GBP 0.871029
GEL 3.155868
GGP 0.870358
GHS 12.278632
GIP 0.870358
GMD 86.803518
GNF 10254.692999
GTQ 8.992131
GYD 245.232658
HKD 9.139902
HNL 30.909075
HRK 7.541359
HTG 153.425407
HUF 383.541131
IDR 19592.281079
ILS 3.737841
IMP 0.870358
INR 105.588353
IQD 1535.774023
IRR 49413.252348
ISK 147.530534
JEP 0.870358
JMD 186.264424
JOD 0.831714
JPY 183.922915
KES 151.205473
KGS 102.572532
KHR 4700.259285
KMF 493.839676
KPW 1055.680711
KRW 1692.050958
KWD 0.360491
KYD 0.976771
KZT 594.722195
LAK 25342.241313
LBP 104971.157413
LKR 363.149128
LRD 208.673753
LSL 19.353421
LTL 3.463608
LVL 0.709545
LYD 6.34781
MAD 10.719579
MDL 19.729409
MGA 5379.83894
MKD 61.553157
MMK 2462.846325
MNT 4175.249916
MOP 9.408818
MRU 46.708602
MUR 54.252382
MVR 18.135254
MWK 2033.019136
MXN 21.002953
MYR 4.755448
MZN 74.960025
NAD 19.353421
NGN 1682.537799
NIO 43.144708
NOK 11.806517
NPR 169.01694
NZD 2.03366
OMR 0.451776
PAB 1.172165
PEN 3.939182
PGK 5.064848
PHP 68.987942
PKR 328.330171
PLN 4.213411
PYG 7694.769637
QAR 4.274072
RON 5.09347
RSD 117.296488
RUB 94.356275
RWF 1707.348886
SAR 4.399644
SBD 9.552397
SCR 17.056489
SDG 705.572764
SEK 10.816415
SGD 1.50815
SHP 0.880065
SLE 28.152754
SLL 24597.539882
SOS 668.679981
SRD 44.722956
STD 24279.039765
STN 24.499267
SVC 10.256693
SYP 12969.64131
SZL 19.356421
THB 36.926941
TJS 10.824876
TMT 4.105552
TND 3.417398
TOP 2.824339
TRY 50.483633
TTD 7.968761
TWD 36.801822
TZS 2906.912974
UAH 49.626814
UGX 4246.872859
USD 1.173015
UYU 45.778629
UZS 14070.57876
VES 352.637318
VND 30850.291416
VUV 142.001818
WST 3.246616
XAF 655.937363
XAG 0.016112
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.170132
XCG 2.112937
XDR 0.815776
XOF 655.937363
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.650958
ZAR 19.342716
ZMK 10558.545767
ZMW 25.875225
ZWL 377.710314
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.2400

    22.89

    +1.05%

  • CMSD

    0.4400

    23.59

    +1.87%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.75

    0%

  • NGG

    1.3500

    78.7

    +1.72%

  • VOD

    0.1300

    13.34

    +0.97%

  • RYCEF

    0.5900

    16.1

    +3.66%

  • GSK

    0.5900

    49.63

    +1.19%

  • RIO

    1.4000

    81.43

    +1.72%

  • BCE

    -0.1600

    23.66

    -0.68%

  • BCC

    0.5200

    74.12

    +0.7%

  • BTI

    -0.0700

    56.55

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.6200

    39.8

    -1.56%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.62

    +0.07%

  • AZN

    -0.3600

    91.57

    -0.39%

  • BP

    1.1000

    35.83

    +3.07%

Iran girls kick down social barriers with karate
Iran girls kick down social barriers with karate / Photo: ATTA KENARE - AFP

Iran girls kick down social barriers with karate

As the referee's whistle signalled the start of the match, two five-year-old Iranian girls faced off, delivering a closely watched karate bout to a captivated audience -- a sign of the changing attitude toward martial arts in the Islamic Republic in recent years.

Text size:

The two young opponents, clad in crisp white karategi with coloured belts and protective headgear, circled each other on the tatami, the floor covering used for practising Japanese martial arts.

Their movements were sharp and deliberate, each kick and block executed with precision and control to the cheers of an all-female audience.

At the final whistle, three minutes later, the two opponents shook hands and embraced.

The match was part of an annual regional tournament that saw 230 participants of all ages gathered in Tehran, lining up in formation before the competition began.

That AFP was accorded rare access to film and photograph a competition for women and girls was itself a sign of greater official openness.

"This sport is anything but violent" because it "promotes discipline", said Samaneh Parsa, a 44-year-old mother who has been practising karate for five years with her daughter Helma and son Ilya.

"I have observed its positive influence on children's behaviour," she said at a club in southern Tehran, where AFP was granted a rare access to the prelude to the match.

For her, karate is a way to "release emotions" and "bring serenity during stressful times", even though it was long frowned upon for women to practise the sport in Iran.

All martial arts were temporarily banned for women after the 1979 Islamic Revolution but were later reinstated under stricter dress code regulations.

- 'Strong mindset' -

As more women turn to karate, the sport has become a symbol of Iran's changing society, where a young, urban generation is quietly challenging traditional gender roles and societal norms.

Last week, Iranian athlete Atousa Golshadnezhad won another gold medal at the Islamic Solidarity Games in Saudi Arabia.

Women in Iran have, in recent years, been pushing social boundaries more broadly -- defying the Islamic Republic's strict rules, including the mandatory dress code.

The trend has been particularly evident since the September 2022 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, who had been arrested by the morality police for allegedly violating the dress code.

Afshin Torkpour, head of Kyokushin-Ryu karate in Iran, has similarly noted a shift in recent years, with women turning to sports that "were once considered violent".

Women practising the sport are now as, and often more motivated, said Torkpour, noting that they develop "a strong mindset".

Around 150,000 people practise karate in Iran across all genders, says Torkpour, who estimates that the actual figure could be much higher, up to two million.

At the Asian Championships, the national junior women's under-21 team won 11 medals, including six golds.

In 2020, two Iranian karatekas participated in the Tokyo Olympics in Japan but did not win any medals.

For Azam Ahmadi, a woman in her 30s who has practised the sport since she was 12, karate teaches essential life skills: "If you fall, you have to get back up, keep going, and never give up."

Mina Mahadi, vice-head of the women's Kyokushin-Ryu karate section in Iran, says it also allows girls to "gain confidence" instead of them "saying yes to anything".

J.Marek--TPP