Squash star Maria Toorpakay raises voice for equality

Published September 22, 2014
Maria Toor. -Photo courtesy Nash Cup
Maria Toor. -Photo courtesy Nash Cup

INCHEON: As a child Maria Toorpakay Wazir had to dress as a boy to be able to play sport in Pakistan and now as the country's number one women's squash player she says there is still too much resistance.

Toorpakay, competing at the Asian Games in South Korea, vowed not to stop helping girls in Pakistan overcome discrimination and cultural obstacles even though she has received threats for her work.

“I feel that this is my responsibility,” said Toorpakay after she was beaten by Hong Kong's Annie Au in the women's singles late Sunday. “I have to raise my voice for the other girls. “Toorpakay's family comes from Waziristan,

As a child in the deeply conservative tribal area, Toorpakay trained and competed as a boy. Girls were forbidden in sport. Competing without a veil and in shorts was perceived as un-Islamic and the Toorpakays were threatened.

Toorpakay at first competed in weightlifting, frequently beating the boys at tournaments. But her father made her switch to squash, where her gender was discovered.

After being required to produce a birth certificate to play squash at the age of 16, the truth about Toorpakay came out and she was bullied by other players.

Toorpakay said Pakistan is changing -- but very slowly.

“Always there are people who do support this logic but there are people who still resist this logic,” she said. But the country's number one women's squash player believes the tide cannot now be turned back. Toorpakay said her rise in international squash should be an example to other young women.

“I have to give them the same opportunity so that they become champions too,” she said.

Toorpakay turned professional in 2006 and came third in the World Junior Women's Championship in 2009.

“This is a beautiful sport, and today I feel that God has given me a chance to come up to such position,” she said.

She vowed to help women to emerge from the shadows through sport, saying it had helped her overcome her tough life in one of the world's most dangerous regions.

“Squash is my lord and I've worked so hard to get to this position,” she said.

Opinion

Editorial

Fear tactics
Updated 28 Mar, 2025

Fear tactics

Under Peca amendments, regime has legal cover to bully and harass working journalists for taking adversarial positions.
Hints of hope
28 Mar, 2025

Hints of hope

PAKISTAN’S economic growth has slowed in the second quarter of the ongoing fiscal year from a year ago as the...
Capacity issues
28 Mar, 2025

Capacity issues

TALK about disjointed development. Pakistan is now producing high-speed train coaches for its low-speed tracks....
Some progress
Updated 27 Mar, 2025

Some progress

The hard-won macroeconomic stability is only a short distance away from a deeper crisis.
Time to talk
27 Mar, 2025

Time to talk

IN an encouraging development, the government has signalled openness to PPP chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari’s ...
Black Sea truce
27 Mar, 2025

Black Sea truce

WHILE the Trump administration may have no problem with Israel renewing its rampage in Gaza, it is playing ...