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Olympic Heroes

So many incredible women at the Olympics this year. Wojdan Shaherkani, the first Saudi woman to compete in the Olympics. Gabby Douglas, the first black woman to win the Olympic all-around in gymnastics (and who also just seems like a nice human being). And Kayla Harrison, who won the first gold medal in judo for the United States, and has spent the past several years speaking openly about being sexually assaulted by a coach:

“It’s no secret,” she began, after a long pause, when a reporter asked her to name the worst moment she had to face in her career, “that I was sexually abused by my former coach. And that was definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever had to overcome.”

Harrison has told her story before, first to USA Today only days after the indictment of Jerry Sandusky came down and the front pages were full of news about Penn State, sexual abuse and coaches who exploit their authority.

She said she felt it necessary to speak out so that others in her position could take heart.

She told it to newspapers and magazines, about how her coach had insinuated himself into the family, how sexual contact led to sexual intercourse over a period of years, on trips to Venezuela, Russia and Estonia, until she was 16. She told about finally revealing this to a friend (a firefighter who would become her fiancé) and then to her mother, who smashed out the coach’s car windows with a baseball bat. (The former coach, Daniel Doyle, was sentenced to 10 years in prison and banned from the sport.)

And she told about how she was a mess — desperate, unhappy and ready to give up on everything — when within weeks her mother, Jeannie Yazell, took her from Ohio to study judo with Jimmy Pedro and his father, Jim Pedro Sr., at Pedro’s Judo Center in Wakefield, Mass.

“We just felt like she just had to get back to what she knew how to do,” Yazell said. “She could have control over what went on on the mat.”

Athletic prowess and personal courage. These women are amazing.


18 thoughts on Olympic Heroes

  1. I was actually coming over here to send an e-mail suggesting you do some kind of piece on Harrison. Having been a judoka my whole adult life I’m happy for the win, but even moreso that it was Kayla who got it. I hope she gets her Wheaties box!

  2. Sorry for the double post, but I thought I should add that people without access to the NBC replays (I know I can’t because I don’t have a Comcast Xfinity account), can watch Kayla’s gold medal match here . Though, Judo can be a bit of a tough sport to follow if you don’t have commentary and you’re unfamiliar with the rules heh.

    Also worth noting, Marti Malloy took the bronze in the 57kg weight class as a major underdog, making this the best olympics ever in terms of medal count for U.S. women’s Judo.

  3. Gabby Douglas’ performance was stellar and outshone everybody else’s; but I think everybody in the judo arena was rooting for Harrison, even though Gemma Gibbons, whom she was competing for the gold with, is a Brit.

  4. jrockford, I don’t know much about judo and it sounds like you do… if you have any interest in writing a guest post about women’s judo or Kayla Harrison, I’d love to feature it! You can drop us a line at feministe@gmail.com. And of course no worries if you’re not up for it.

  5. [content note for article at link: mention of neo-Nazis]
    Kudos to all those women mentioned especially, and also to all the others. I don’t want to go too OT, but I am kind of curious for opinions on the situation of another female Olympian who didn’t do so well.

    I seems kind of unfair that her picture and name are plastered everywhere while the alleged BF is not even identified. And why was it really necessary for her to leave at all? As long as she herself hadn’t said any nasty things and remained discreet, her team was finished competing and she could have stayed through the end. And if she did have to leave, why couldn’t it have been done quietly? I realize that it’s the German committee’s call, but still. It’s not like the other one who had actually made a racist tweet.

  6. Admirable women indeed. Also,

    She told about finally revealing this to a friend (a firefighter who would become her fiancé) and then to her mother, who smashed out the coach’s car windows with a baseball bat.

    I wish she was my mom.

  7. And why was it really necessary for her to leave at all? As long as she herself hadn’t said any nasty things and remained discreet, her team was finished competing and she could have stayed through the end

    I think the belief is that she’s a neo-Nazi herself; this wasn’t the first time that she had a neo-Nazi boyfriend, and she may have other associations. I’m not surprised that the German Olympic Committee would bend over as far backwards as possible to avoid any hint of taking it easy on someone of that particular persuasion. Whether or not the person was known to have made racist or anti-Semitic comments.

  8. Her mother is also a black belt, according to one of the news stories. There was an amusing comment by one of the police to the effect of “aside from the broken windows, she was very restrained”.

  9. I’m guessing since Germany takes any Nazi-ism very seriously, and I can’t see how one could be dating a known Neo-Nazi without sharing many of their views, I can understand why she left.

    There was a case of Aboriginal boxer Damien Hooper, who now has to apologize to the Australian Olympic Committee for having the audacity to wear the Aboriginal flag on a shirt during the Olympics
    It’s not allowed to make a political statement at the games, apparently. Which is kinda weird considering much of the games is pretty political, right down to them scheduling Olympic events in favor of the US prime-time TV (which didn’t happen this time, but still…). I am all sorts of pissed about this situation.

  10. Props for Serena Williams, who is playing like she invented whoopass. Not slender, not precious and adorable, not giving a damn.
    Not young any more. The woman is wonderful.

  11. Having any affiliation with hate/terror groups is super sensitive given that there have been attacks on players. If players have special access to housing and events, then it can put hate group-targeted athletes at risk.

  12. I think the belief is that she’s a neo-Nazi herself; this wasn’t the first time that she had a neo-Nazi boyfriend, and she may have other associations. I’m not surprised that the German Olympic Committee would bend over as far backwards as possible to avoid any hint of taking it easy on someone of that particular persuasion. Whether or not the person was known to have made racist or anti-Semitic comments.

    While I understand the motivation, I still don’t think kicking someone out do to the political affiliations- however horrible- of someone else they know is good policy, at all.

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