Ethiopian girls break taboos and find joy in skateboarding
Iman Mahamud, 17, told AFP that skating had helped her defeat her fears .PHOTO BY EDUARDO SOTERAS
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Dressed in jeans, sweatpants and abayas, dozens of
Ethiopian schoolgirls practise the art of nailing a landing and finding their
balance -- and their confidence -- as they zip across a skatepark in Addis
Ababa.
Some gingerly slide forward a few metres, holding
a friend's hand for support, while others zoom across ramps and concrete bumps
at full speed.
Members of Ethiopian Girl Skaters, an all-female
group set up by skateboarders Sosina Challa and Micky Asfaw, the girls -- some
as young as six -- are pushing back against gender stereotypes and having fun
doing it.
Challa, 24, told AFP she set up the organisation
to empower young women, who often struggle to take up extreme sports because of
a commonly-held belief in Ethiopia that "girls should stay home and help
their parents".
Since she co-founded the group in December 2020,
she and the other mentors in the organisation have taught more than 150 girls
how to skate.
Hanna Bless, a 22-year-old stylist who started
skateboarding two years ago, told AFP: "It's not really common for a girl
to start skating because people don't support you.
"But somebody had to be the first, some group
had to start and we were the first one and I feel honoured to be part of
that," she added.
Although Ethiopia is home to many skateboarding
groups, they are largely dominated by male skaters.
With time, the women skateboarders have learned to
cope not just with the inevitable bruises the sport brings but also the
criticism from naysayers.
Iman Mahamud, 17, told AFP that after 18 months of
lessons, she no longer cared about "what people say about me being a girl
and doing such stuff".
"It helped me defeat my fears," she
said.


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