1.1 C
New York
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
HomeSportsWhen Sania was told to drop tennis as 'no one would marry...

When Sania was told to drop tennis as ‘no one would marry dark girl’!

Date:

Related stories

India to play Champions Trophy matches in Dubai due to neutral venue agreement

India's matches in the 2025 ICC Champions Trophy will...

India’s Gukesh, 18, becomes youngest chess world champion, surpassing Kasparov

Indian chess player Gukesh Dommaraju has become the youngest-ever...

Indian-American debutants Bhatia, Theegala shine at Hero World Challenge

Indian-American golfers Akshay Bhatia and Sahith Theegala made an...

Indian prodigy Gukesh Dommaraju poised to make chess history at World Championship

Indian prodigy Gukesh Dommaraju broke new ground to reach...

Rafael Nadal announces retirement: A look back at his legendary career

Rafael Nadal ended his career on Tuesday (19) as...

A trailblazer in Indian tennis, Sania Mirza, on Thursday, revealed that as a child, she was once asked to stop playing as “no one would marry” her if her complexion turned “dark” due to the rigours of an outdoor sport.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum’s India Economic Summit 2019 in New Delhi, Sania, who has three doubles and an equal number of mixed doubles Grand Slams to her credit, reflected on the challenges she faced during a panel discussion on women and leadership.

Sania remains India’s most successful woman tennis player, rising to a career-high world no. 27 in mid-2007 in the WTA singles chart.

“To start with, parents, neighbours, aunties and the uncles (need to) stop telling you how dark you will become and no one will marry you if you play a sport. I was just eight (when this came up) and everybody thought nobody is going to marry me because I would get dark. I thought to myself I am just a kid, I’ll be fine,” said the 32-year-old.

“It is so deeply embedded, this culture about how a girl needs to be pretty and by that also one means fair, I don’t know why. This culture has to change,” added the Hyderabadi, who also has 41 WTA doubles titles to her credit and was the world no.1 in women’s doubles in 2015.

- Advertisement -

Married to Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik, Sania is currently working towards making a comeback to the professional circuit next year after taking a break to become a mother.

Reflecting on her journey, Sania said she had just sprint legend P.T. Usha to look up to in her growing up years but the times have evolved for the better and several women athletes are becoming role models for the current crop of aspiring athletes.

“I feel proud that I had, maybe, a little part to play in women taking up sport. The only sportswoman I could look up to was P.T. Usha and she was a couple of generations before me. Today, we can name P.V. Sindhu, Saina Nehwal, Dipa Karmakar, so many of them,” she said.

“We still have some way to go…I still don’t think there are equal opportunities. But we have superstars now and they are the biggest in sports outside cricket. Imagine what will happen they actually get equal opportunities,” she asserted.

Elaborating her take on the general attitude towards professionally successful women, Sania cited a recent interaction to assert that women are still judged for how good a homemaker they are.

“I was at the Mumbai airport, a gentleman came and told me that ‘motherhood is suiting you’. He took a picture and asked me where my son was, I told him he is in Hyderabad. His next sentence was ‘you should be with him’.

“I told him ‘where is your child?’ He said ‘at home’. I told him ‘well you should be with him too’. He didn’t think that there was anything insulting to ask me that,” she recalled.

Sania said it is not just random strangers who are capable of asking awkward questions.

“In my case, questions came from close family members, not outsiders. They (close family members) are the ones who question you the most and make you doubt yourselves,” revealed the United Nations’ Women’s Goodwill Ambassador for South Asia.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here