Posted on 11/16/2005 4:05:45 PM PST by freepatriot32
Today's celebrities are well aware of their responsibilities as role models but can well do without public interference in their private lives. As tennis star Sania Mirza says, As long as I'm winning, people shouldn't care whether my skirt is six inches long or six feet long.
Speaking at the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on Wednesday, Sania said, How I dress is a very personal thing. Wearing a long-sleeved black-and-white shirt with conservative black pants, she was speaking out in public for the first time since a cleric issued a fatwa against the way she dressed on court.
Sania, who became the first Indian woman tennis player to enter the fourth round of a Grand Slam at the US Open in September, was in the eye of a storm when, just days later, a little-known Muslim religious scholar asked her to change her dress code while playing tennis tournaments.
At that time, Sania had refused to comment.
Now, with the benefit of hindsight, she said in response to a question by moderator Vir Sanghvi, HTs editorial director, on how she coped with the pressure: As a public figure everyones going to have an opinion about you. Its up to you to take that opinion seriously or not.
She said it was scary that every time she wears a T-shirt, it becomes a talking point for the next three days.
"Everything a celebrity does is in the public eye," said the 19 year old. "It used to annoy me earlier but as you get more mature, you learn."
She added: "I am comfortable with the attention now. But as a human being, I value my privacy. Just a simple act like going out for lunch means that everyone's looking at me, at what I'm wearing. I'm fine with attention, but not at private moments."
But, she added, she was conscious that she was a role model for many young people. "As public figures we all have our responsibilities. We all have to set an example for everyone, she said.
Sania was speaking on the 'Role of the Celebrity: Influencing Public Policy' along with F-1 racer Narain Karthikeyan and Miss Universe 2005 Natalie Glebova.
Being in the limelight did put a lot of pressure, the celebs admitted. "Of course there is pressure, but I'm thankful to God that I'm where I can make a difference, maybe, to society, Sania said.
She said she was fortunate that there had never been any pressure from her family. "I was always taught that in sports, as in life, you're not always going to win," she said. All three spoke of causes close to their heart. If Glebova, as Miss Universe, supports AIDS-related causes, Sania wants to get involved with removing female infanticide. Narain said he would like to see safe driving become a public issue.
Or
I think the burka might impede her backhand. And her forehand.
It wouldn't impede my hands!
Blue Ghosts OUT of tennis
She looks like she has a slight chill.....
She'd probably give you her backhand, burka or no.
I don't get it. If she's Indian, what business does an Imam have issuing a fatwa to an infidel?
She's an Indian Muslim.
I was thinking of a different stroke she could serve!
And what about her serve? Allah forbid that hemline travels above her ankles!
sO ARE THEY GONNA nUKE THE wILLIAMS SISTERS?
Or do you got to be a musSCUM to rate a death threat?
Maybe she could play seated?
In all fairness, some of these attitudes were pretty common everywhere until a few years ago. 19th century British and American physicians wrote treatises on how the needs of women's uteruses prevented the women from doing anything athletic. While it is true that hyperathletic women often cease to ovulate, most of us are not in that category and a little exercise is probably good for the soul, the body and the uterus.
Still, that said, I don't think any of the British physicians were issuing fatwas requesting that the offending women be stoned to death...That's Islam for you, a syncretist religion that took the most outmoded and aggressive things from the Old Testament, combined them with the most nebulous mysticism from the NT, and threw in a pagan meteor site to put it over the top. All of this to say that women shouldn't play tennis.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.