Lindsay Gibbs
Sports Reporter at
ThinkProgress. Contact me: lgibbs@thinkprogress.org.
South
Africa’s Caster Semenya reacts after finishing in second place in the women’s
800-meters final at the 2012 Summer Olympics, London. CREDIT: LEE JIN-MAN, AP
You might not know the name
Caster Semenya, but it’s likely you’ve heard her story.
When she was only 18 years
old, the South African runner won gold at the 2009 world championships in the
800 meters. She went on to win the silver medal at the London Olympics, and is
the overwhelming favorite in Rio.
But, unlike her record-setting
peers on the track, Semenya isn’t best known for her speed.
Semenya is allegedly intersex.
Ever since three hours before her world championship race in 2009 — when news unacceptably
leaked that the International Association of Athletics Foundation (IAAF) was
going to subject her to a gender test — she has been more famous for her
naturally-occurring testosterone levels than her talent.
“God
made me the way I am and I accept myself.”
Over the last seven years, the
narrative surrounding Semenya has taken on a life of its own. She’s no longer
viewed as a human being; she’s merely a concept
to
debate.
While others get fawning Sports
Illustrated covers when they dominate their sports, Semenya gets ridiculed
and questioned, poked and prodded.
When the controversy over her
gender erupted, it took Semenya and those close to her by surprise.
According
to the Guardian, at the world championships, she “was so
overwhelmed by the global controversy that she had to be persuaded to accept
her gold medal.”
Still, through it all, Semenya
just keeps running, and refuses to apologize for the body she was given.
“God made me the way I am and
I accept myself,” she said back in 2009, when intimate details about her body first
became a talking point for pundits.
“I can’t stop running because
of people,” Semenya said to the BBC last year, as reported by ESPN. “If you have a problem with it, come straight to me
and tell me. I cannot stop because people say no she looks like a man this and
that. It’s their problem, not mine.”
That attitude in itself is
worth celebrating.
South
Africa’s Caster Semenya celebrates winning silver in the Women’s 800m final at
the 2011 World Athletics Championships in South Korea. CREDIT: LEE JIN-MAN, AP
Now, before we continue, let’s
get a few of the facts straight.
The IAAF cleared Semenya to
compete in 2010, and the following year, it implemented new regulations for women with
hyperandrogenism, or elevated testosterone levels. The purpose of the new rule
was to maintain the division between men’s and women’s sports, based on the
belief that the primary reason that elite male athletes are better than elite
female athletes is testosterone.
If women tested had
testosterone levels higher than the new rules permitted, they had to
artificially lower them through medication or invasive surgery in order to keep
competing against other women.
Thus, Semenya’s presence in
Rio is completely by the rules. Furthermore, it’s crucial to note that she has
never been suspected of doping or cheating in any way; her condition has never
been officially confirmed or detailed; and there is no definitive proof that she
took anything to lower her testosterone levels between 2011 and 2015 in order
to comply with IAAF regulations.
However, from 2010 to 2015,
most of Semenya’s times in the 800m were great but not other-worldly, and this
year, she is running even faster than she did in 2009. While there are multiple
explanations for her career renaissance — she just started to work with a new
coach; she is finally healthy after dealing with injuries for a few years; she
is taking her fitness and training more seriously than she did earlier in her
career— many assume it is because she no longer has to artificially suppress
her testosterone levels.
In the
past, the IAAF has specifically documented that they single out female athletes
who “display masculine traits” for testosterone tests.
So how did we get here, to the
place where a quiet 25-year-old from a small village in South Africa is the
poster child for gender limits in sport?
Well, back in 2009, IAAF
officials said they were forced to gender test Semenya because her time in the
800m dropped seven seconds in less than nine months and they had to make sure
she didn’t have an “unfair advantage.” But that was not the sole reason.
“Just look at her,” Russian
Mariya Savinova, who finished fifth in the 2009 world championship, told
reporters after the race. (If that name sounds familiar, it’s because Savinova
just happens to be known as “the face of Russia’s doping scandal.”)
Unlike drug tests, gender
tests (or testosterone tests, if you will) are not carried out at random. And
Semenya happens to be tall, muscular, flat-chested, and black. This is not a
coincidence. According to Katrina Karkazis, a senior research scholar at
the Center for Biomedical Ethics at Stanford University, in the past, IAAF
specifically singled out female athletes who “display masculine traits” for
testosterone tests, while the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has
encouraged its national charters to “actively investigate” any “perceived deviation” in gender.
In practice, gender testing is
far more about policing women’s bodies than protecting women’s sports.
Dutee Chand
CREDIT: RAFIQ MAQBOOL, AP
Testosterone tests tend to target women who don’t fit into the
ideal Western standards of what a woman should look like — delicate and overtly
feminine, white and lithe. This includes women like Dutee Chand, an Indian
sprinter who was selected for gender testing after her success at the 2012
under-18 national championships and 2013 Asian Championships.
The tests Chand was forced to
undergo — without explanation, mind you — were extremely invasive. As reported
by the New
York Times, it involved an MRI and a gynecological exam that included
“measuring and palpating the clitoris, vagina and labia, as well as evaluating
breast size and pubic hair scored on an illustrated five-grade scale.”
She was subsequently banned from
competition, and wasn’t given a reason until she found out through the
media that she produced more testosterone than most women.
To echo Jessica Luther of Excelle
Sports, “ How is this in any way okay? How can we care more about some old
racist, transphobic, and sexist imperial idea of ‘woman’ than about the lives
of these actual women?”
But instead of undergoing an operation like
four elite athletes from “rural
or mountainous regions of developing countries” were allegedly forced to
undergo before the London games, or taking medication to alter her body’s
natural chemistry, Chand decided to fight the ruling.
Thanks to Chand’s legal challenge, the CAS
overturned the hypoandrogenism regulations last year. And this year, Chand made
it all the way to Rio, with her natural body in tact.
But, significantly, Chand did not win the
gold medal in her 100m Olympic race this week. In fact, she didn’t even advance
to the semifinals, let alone the final. She finished seventh out of eight in her
heat, with a time of 11.68 seconds.
Her naturally elevated testosterone levels
did not launch her directly to the top of the podium, or automatically separate
her from the rest of the field. Among other athletes on the Olympic stage, she
was simply one of the many elites watching the handful of exceptionals breeze
past them.
Chand still made the most of her trip to
Rio, though, by meeting one of her idols.
This photo is everything. Tears of joy! Dutee and Caster! pic.twitter.com/qPamidKnJa— Katrina Karkazis (@Karkazis) August 15, 2016
You’d think that Chand’s
rather mortal performance would put this argument over elevated T levels into
perspective. Of course, it hasn’t.
There is literally a sense of
trepidation in the air ahead of Semenya’s 800m final on Saturday. Everyone is
already discussing what it will mean if Semenya wins, and, heaven forbid, beats
the world record time of 1:53.28. (Which at 33 years old is the
longest-standing record in track and field.)
The Associated Press calls
Semenya as a “dilemma.” Denise Lewis wrote in wrote in Telegraph Sport that Semenya’s inclusion is “not a healthy
situation for the sport.” Tom Fordyce of the BBC wrote if Semenya breaks the
world record in Rio, it could spell the end of her
career because of the attention it would bring to her condition.
And Paula Radcliffe, a
ridiculously dominant marathon runner in her time who currently holds the world
record in the sport, says Semenya is an affront to the entire competition.
“When we talk about it in
terms of fully expecting no other result than Caster Semenya to win that 800m,
then it’s no longer sport,” Radcliffe told the BBC.
Semenya
should not be seen as a threat; she should be seen as a treat.
But all of this
pearl-clutching and fear-mongering is as absurd as it is demeaning.
After all, sports are supposed
to reward freak-of-nature athletes. Looking across the Olympic games, it’s
clear that there is no one “right way” to have an Olympic body, especially for
women. There are super skinny and flexible synchronized swimmers, short
gymnasts, plus-size weight lifters, and abnormally tall basketball players. Every
elite athlete has some sort of physical advantage they were born with.
Semenya runs in
her 800m preliminary heat in Rio on Wednesday. CREDIT: MARTIN MEISSNER, AP
And the most dominant
athletes? They really have the physical gifts. Michael Phelps has feet and
hands that are practically fins. Usain Bolt is much taller than most sprinters.
Simone Biles is even shorter and more muscular than the majority of the
gymnastics field.
These stars have found ways to
maximize the gifts they were given and take their sports to the next level.
Their dominance isn’t seen as boring; it’s seen as extraordinary. How is what
Semenya is doing any different? The concept of a level playing field has always
been a myth. From bodies to coaches, economics to nationality, a lot of luck
and chance goes into who turns into an Olympic athlete and who doesn’t.
For that reason, Semenya
should not be seen as a threat; she should be seen as a treat. After all, a
woman running in the body she was born with and setting records is not an affront
to the sanctity of sport. It is the entire purpose of sport. We should be
marveling at it.
The public flogging Semenya
has endured would have broken most people. Her trip to the world championships
in Berlin was only her second trip away from home, and it ended with bookmakers offering odds on her gender. Shy and private,
she’s tried to stay away from the spotlight that’s followed her over the last
decade, but she’s never given up her love for and dedication to her sport.
“Running is what I will always
do,” Semenya said.
“Even if, maybe, the
authorities could have stopped me from running in 2009, they could not have
stopped me in the fields. I would have carried on with my running, it doesn’t
matter. When I run I feel free, my mind is free.”
There are two more chances to
see Semenya run in Rio: the 800m semifinals on Thursday night and the final on
Saturday night. Cherish it, because her races are truly something special — not
because of her gender, because of her greatness.
Source: thinkprogress
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