Culture
The Female Soccer Players Challenging France’s Hijab Ban
SARCELLES, France — Each time Mother Diakité heads to football video game, her belly remains in knots.
It took place once again on a current Saturday mid-day in Sarcelles, a north residential area of Paris. Her amateur group had actually concerned encounter the regional club, as well as Diakité, a 23-year-old Muslim midfielder, feared she would certainly not be enabled to play in her hijab.
This moment, the umpire allow her in. “It functioned,” she claimed at the end of the video game, raiding the fencing surrounding the area, her grinning face covered in a black Nike head headscarf.
However Diakité had actually just failed the fractures.
For many years, France’s football federation has actually prohibited gamers taking part in competitors from using noticeable spiritual icons such as hijabs, a policy it competes remains in maintaining with the company’s rigorous nonreligious worths. Although the restriction is freely applied at the amateur degree, it has actually hung over Muslim females’s gamers for several years, smashing their hopes of expert professions as well as driving some far from the video game entirely.
In an ever before extra modern France, where females’s football is flourishing, the restriction has actually likewise triggered an expanding reaction. At the center of the battle is Les Hijabeuses, a team of young hijab-wearing football gamers from various groups that have actually signed up with pressures to war what they call a biased policy that leaves out Muslim females from sporting activities.
Their advocacy has actually touched a nerve in France, revitalizing warmed arguments on the combination of Muslims in a nation with a hurt connection with Islam, as well as highlighting the battle of French sporting activities authorities to resolve their protection of rigorous nonreligious worths with expanding require better depiction on the area.
“What we desire is to be approved as we are, to execute these grand mottos of variety, inclusiveness,” claimed Founé Diawara, the head of state of Les Hijabeuses, which has 80 participants. “Our only wish is to play football.”
The Hijabeuses cumulative was developed in 2020 with the aid of scientists as well as area coordinators in an effort to resolve a mystery: Although French legislations as well as FIFA, globe football’s regulating body, permit sportswomen to play in hijabs, France’s football federation restricts it, suggesting that it would certainly brake with the concept of spiritual nonpartisanship on the area.
Fans of the restriction claim hijabs hint an Islamist radicalization taking control of sporting activities. However the individual tales of Hijabeuses participants stress exactly how football has actually been identified with emancipation — as well as exactly how the restriction remains to seem like an action backwards.
Diakité started playing football at age 12, at first concealing it from her moms and dads, that saw football as a kids’ sporting activity. “I intended to be a specialist football gamer,” she claimed, calling it “a desire.”
Jean-Claude Njehoya, her existing train, claimed that “when she was more youthful, she had a great deal of abilities” that might have moved her to the highest degree. However “from the minute” she comprehended the hijab restriction would certainly influence her, he claimed, “she didn’t truly press herself even more.”
Diakité claimed she picked her very own to put on the hijab in 2018 — as well as to surrender her desire. She currently bets a third-division club as well as intends to open up a motoring institution. “No remorse,” she claimed. “Either I’m approved as I am, or I’m not. Which’s it.”
Karthoum Dembele, a 19-year-old midfielder that puts on a nose ring, likewise claimed she needed to challenge her mom to be enabled to play. She rapidly signed up with a sports-intensive program in intermediate school as well as joined club trial runs. However it wasn’t till she discovered the restriction, 4 years earlier, that she understood she might no more be enabled to contend.
“I had actually handled to make my mom give up as well as I’m informed the federation won’t allow me play,” Dembele claimed. “I informed myself: What a joke!”
Various other participants of the team remembered episodes when umpires disallowed them from the area, triggering some, really feeling embarrassed, to give up football as well as rely on sporting activities where hijabs are enabled or endured, like handball or futsal.
Throughout in 2015, Les Hijabeuses lobbied the French football federation to rescind the restriction. They corresponded, consulted with authorities as well as also organized a demonstration at the federation’s head office — fruitless. The federation decreased to comment for this write-up.
Paradoxically, it was Les Hijabeuses’ staunchest challengers that lastly placed them in the limelight.
In January, a team of traditional legislators attempted to preserve the football federation’s hijab restriction in legislation, suggesting that hijabs intimidated to spread out extreme Islam in sporting activities clubs. The relocation mirrored a sticking around despair in France pertaining to the Muslim shroud, which routinely mixes dispute. In 2019, a French shop went down a strategy to offer a hijab developed for joggers after a battery of objection.
Stimulated by the legislators’ initiatives, Les Hijabeuses incomed an extreme lobbying war the change. Taking advantage of their solid social networks visibility — the team has virtually 30,000 fans on Instagram — they introduced an application that collected greater than 70,000 trademarks; rallied lots of sporting activity celebs to their reason; as well as arranged video games prior to the Us senate structure as well as with expert athletes.
Vikash Dhorasoo, a previous France midfielder that participated in a video game, claimed the restriction left him stunned. “I simply don’t obtain it,” he claimed. “It’s the Muslims that are targeted right here.”
Stéphane Piednoir, the legislator behind the change, refuted the complaint that the regulations was targeted at Muslims particularly, stating its emphasis was all noticeable spiritual indications. However he recognized that the change had actually been encouraged by the using of the Muslim shroud, which he called “a publicity lorry” for political Islam as well as a kind of “aesthetic proselytizing.” (Piednoir likewise has actually condemned the screen of the Catholic tattoos of the P.S.G. celebrity Neymar as “regrettable” as well as questioned if the spiritual restriction needs to encompass them.)
The change was ultimately denied by the federal government’s bulk in parliament, although not without rubbings. The Paris authorities prohibited a demonstration arranged by Les Hijabeuses, as well as the French sporting activities preacher, that said the legislation permits hijab-wearing females to play, encountered federal government colleagues opposing the head headscarf.
The Hijabeuses’ battle might not be a prominent one in France, where 6 in 10 individuals sustain outlawing hijabs in the road, according to a current study by the ballot company CSA. Marine Le Pen, the reactionary governmental prospect that will certainly encounter Head of state Emmanuel Macron in a runoff ballot on April 24 — with a chance at a last triumph — has actually claimed that if chosen, she will certainly prohibit the Muslim shroud in public rooms.
However, on the football area, everybody appears to concur that hijabs must be enabled.
“No one minds if they have fun with it,” claimed Rana Kenar, 17, a Sarcelles gamer that had actually concerned see her group face Diakité’s club on an ice-cold February night.
Kenar was being in the bleachers with around 20 fellow gamers. All claimed they saw the restriction as a kind of discrimination, keeping in mind that, at the amateur degree, the restriction was freely applied.
Also the umpire of the video game in Sarcelles, that had actually allowed Diakité play, appeared up in arms with the restriction. “I looked the various other away,” he claimed, decreasing to provide his name for concern of consequences.
Pierre Samsonoff, the previous replacement head of the football federation’s amateur branch, claimed the concern would certainly turn up once again in the coming years, with the growth of females’s football as well as the holding of the 2024 Olympics in Paris, which will certainly include veiled professional athletes from Muslim nations.
Samsonoff, that at first protected outlawing the hijab, claimed he had actually considering that softened his position, recognizing the plan might wind up rejecting Muslim gamers. “The concern is whether we are not producing even worse repercussions by choosing to prohibit it on the areas than by choosing to permit it,” he claimed.
Piednoir, the legislator, claimed the gamers were rejecting themselves. However he recognized never ever having actually spoken to any kind of hijab-wearing professional athletes to hear their inspirations, contrasting the scenario to “firemens” being asked to go “pay attention to pyromaniacs.”
Dembele, that handles the Hijabeuses’ social networks accounts, claimed she was usually struck by the physical violence of on-line remarks as well as the strong political resistance.
“We hang on,” she claimed. “It’s not simply for us, it’s likewise for the girls that tomorrow will certainly have the ability to imagine betting France, for P.S.G.”
Monique Jaques added coverage.
Culture
The Books We’re Excited About in Early 2025
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | How to Listen
A new year means new books to look forward to, and 2025 already promises a bounty — from the first volume of Bill Gates’s memoirs to a new novel by the reigning Nobel laureate, Han Kang, to a biography of Rosemary Woodruff Leary, the wife and psychedelic collaborator of the counterculture pioneer Timothy Leary.
On this week’s episode, Gilbert Cruz and Joumana Khatib talk about some of the upcoming books they’re most anticipating over the next several months.
Books discussed:
“Stone Yard Devotional,” by Charlotte Wood
“Silence,” by Pico Iyer
“Onyx Storm,” by Rebecca Yarros
“Gliff,” by Ali Smith
“The Dream Hotel,” by Laila Lalami
“The Colony,” by Annika Norlin
“We Do Not Part,” by Han Kang
“Playworld,” by Adam Ross
“Death of the Author,” by Nnedi Okorafor
“The Acid Queen: The Psychedelic Life and Counterculture Rebellion of Rosemary Woodruff Leary,” by Susannah Cahalan
“Tilt,” by Emma Pattee
“Dream Count,” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
“Hope: The Autobiography,” by Pope Francis
“Jesus Wept: Seven Popes and the Battle for the Soul of the Catholic Church,” by Philip Shenon
“The Antidote,” by Karen Russell
“Source Code,” by Bill Gates
“Great Big Beautiful Life,” by Emily Henry
“Sunrise on the Reaping,” by Suzanne Collins
We would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Review’s podcast in general. You can send them to books@nytimes.com.
Culture
Grand Slam prize money is enormous. The economics of tennis tournaments is complicated
Four times a year, one of the biggest and most important tennis tournaments in the world sends out an announcement full of dollar signs and zeroes with the words “record prize money” scattered liberally.
The four Grand Slams, the first of which begins Sunday in Melbourne, are the high points of the tennis calendar. Players at the 2025 Australian Open will compete for $59million (£47m) this year — over $6.2m more than last year. In 2024, the four tournaments paid out over $250m between them, while their leaders spent the year aligning themselves with the players who make their events unmissable, whose gravity pulls in the broadcast deals and sponsorships, with their own dollar signs and zeroes.
Led by Australian Open chief Craig Tiley, the Grand Slams led the movement for a so-called premium tour which would pare down the overloaded tennis calendar and guarantee top players always being in the same events, let alone time zones. It would also lock swaths of the globe out of the worldwide spectacle that tennis represents.
The great irony is that despite the largesse and the cozy relationship, the players get a smaller cut of the money at the Grand Slams than they do in most of the rest of the rest of that hectic, endless season — and a fraction of what the best athletes in other sports collect from their events. The Australian Open’s prize pool amounts to about a 15-20 percent cut of the overall revenues of Tennis Australia, the organization that owns and stages the tournament, which accounts for nearly all of its annual revenue. The exact numbers at the French Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open vary, but that essential split is roughly a constant. The 2023 U.S. Open had a prize pool of $65m against earned revenue from the tournament that came out at just over $514m, putting the cut at about 12 percent. The U.S. Open accounted for just under 90 percent of USTA revenues that year.
The explanations from the Grand Slams, which collectively generate over $1.5bn (£1.2bn) a year, run the gamut. They need to dedicate hundreds of millions of dollars each year to fund junior tennis development and other, less profitable tournaments in their respective nations — an obligation pro sports leagues don’t have. There is a constant need to upgrade their facilities, in the silent race for prestige and primacy of which the constant prize money one-upmanship is just one element.
That dynamic is not lost on players — least of all Novak Djokovic, the top men’s player of the modern era and a co-founder of the five-year-old Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA).
“I’m just going to state a fact,” Djokovic said during a post-match news conference in Brisbane last week. “The pie split between the governing bodies in major sports, all major American sports, like NFL, NBA, baseball, NHL, is 50 percent. Maybe more, maybe less, but around 50 percent.
“Ours is way lower than that.”
Since 1968, the first year in which the four majors offered prize money as part of the Open Era’s embrace of professional tennis players, the purses have only grown. The 1968 French Open was the first to offer prize money, with Ken Rosewall earning just over $3,000 for beating Rod Laver in the final. The women’s singles champion, Nancy Richey, was still an amateur player, so could not claim her $1,000 prize. By 1973, lobbying from Billie Jean King helped convince the U.S. Open to make prize money equal for men and women through the draws; it took another 28 years for the Australian Open to do so year in, year out. Venus Williams’ intervention helped force the French Open and Wimbledon to follow suit in 2007.
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Fifty years after Rosewall’s triumph in Paris, the 2018 men’s champion Rafael Nadal took home $2.35million, an increase of over 73,000 percent. The year-on-year increases at each major are more modest, usually between 10 and 12 percent, but that percentage of tournament revenue remains steadfast, if not entirely immovable.
The Grand Slams argue that there are plenty of hungry mouths at their table, many more than just the 128 players that enter each singles draw each year.
“Tennis Australia is a not-for-profit and a business model built on significant investment into delivering the event and promoting the sport to drive momentum on revenue and deliver consistently increasing prize money,” Darren Pearce, the organization’s chief spokesperson, said in a statement this week.
Money from the Australian Open also helps fund tournaments in Brisbane, Adelaide and Hobart, as well as the United Cup, the combined men’s and women’s event in Perth and Sydney. Pearce said the prize money increases outpace the revenue growth.
The Grand Slams also point to the millions of dollars they spend on player travel, housing, transportation and meals during tournaments, though team sport athletes receive those as well. Eloise Tyson, a spokesperson for the All England Lawn Tennis Club, which stages Wimbledon, noted that overall Grand Slam prize money had risen from $209million in 2022 to $254m last year, a 22 percent increase.
“Alongside increasing our player compensation year-on-year, we continue to make significant investment into the facilities and services available for players and their teams at The Championships,” Tyson wrote in an email.
Officials with France’s tennis federation, the FFT, which owns the French Open, did not respond to a request for comment.
Brendan McIntyre, a spokesman for the United States Tennis Association, which owns the U.S. Open, released a statement this week touting the USTA’s pride in its leadership on player compensation, including offering equal prize money and the largest combined purse in tennis history at the 2024 US Open. A first-round exit earned $100,000, up 72 percent from 2019. Just making the qualifying draw was good for $25,000.
“As the national governing body for tennis in the U.S, we have a broader financial obligation to the sport as a whole,” the organization said.
“The USTA’s mission is to grow tennis at all levels, both in the U.S. and globally, and to make the sport accessible to all individuals in order to inspire healthier people and communities.”
None of the organizations outlined a specific formula for determining the amount of prize money they offered each year, which is roughly the same as a percentage of their parent organizations overall revenues. That may be a coincidence, though the Grand Slams also have the benefit of not facing any threat to their primacy.
The USTA’s statement gestures at how the structure of tennis contributes to this financial irony. In soccer, countries and cities bid to host the Champions League and World Cup finals; the Olympics changes every four years and even the Super Bowl in the NFL moves around the United States, with cities and franchises trying to one-up one another.
The four Grand Slams, though, are the four Grand Slams. There are good reasons for this beyond prestige: the infrastructure, both physical and learned, required to host a two- or three-week event at the scale of a major year in, year out is available to a vanishingly small number of tennis facilities around the world. There is no opportunity for another organization or event to bid to replace one of the Grand Slams by offering a richer purse or other amenities.
GO DEEPER
A year ago, tennis was broken. It’s more broken now
This dynamic has been in place for years and has become more important in recent months. The PTPA has hired a group of antitrust lawyers to evaluate the structure of tennis. The lawyers are compiling a report on whether the the sport includes elements that are anti-competitive, preparing for a possible litigation with the potential to remake the sport.
The ATP and WTA Tours, which sanction 250-, 500- and 1000-level events as well as the end-of-season Tour Finals, give players a larger share of revenue. There is some disagreement between players and officials over how much it is and the methods of accounting; some player estimates hover around 25 percent, while tour estimates can be in the range of 40 percent. Both remain short of the team equivalents in the United States.
On the ATP Tour, the nine 1000-level tournaments have a profit-sharing agreement that, in addition to prize money, gives players 50 percent of the profits under an agreed-upon accounting formula that sets aside certain revenues and subtracts certain costs, including investments the tournaments make in their facilities. The WTA does not have such an agreement. It outlines a complex prize money formula in its rule book with pages of exceptions, not based on a guaranteed share of overall tour revenues.
The tours have argued that because media rights payments constitute a lower percentage of revenues than at the Grand Slams, and because the costs of putting on tournaments are so high, a 50-50 revenue share would simply turn some tournaments into loss-making entities and make tennis unsustainable as a sport.
James Quinn, one of the antitrust lawyers hired by the PTPA, said he saw serious problems with the model, describing a structure that prevents competition from rival tournaments.
Some events outside the 52-week program of tournaments — which see players earn ranking points as well as money — have official status (the Laver Cup is sanctioned by the ATP). But the remainder, such as the Six Kings Slam in Riyadh, which debuted this year and offered record prize money of over $6million to the winner, are not sanctioned, for now providing only a peripheral form of competition to ruling bodies’ control of the sport.
The Grand Slams, ATP and WTA insist this is for the best. They see themselves as caretakers of global sport trying to bring some order where chaos might otherwise reign.
Djokovic doesn’t totally disagree. He understands tennis is different from the NBA. He’s led the Player Council at the ATP, which represents male professionals, and he has seen how the sausage gets made and how complicated it is with so many tournaments of all shapes and sizes in so many countries. At the end of the day, he still thinks players deserve more than a 20-percent cut, especially since the Grand Slams don’t make the kinds of contributions to player pension plans or end-of-the-year bonus pools that the ATP does, nor do they provide the year-round support of the WTA.
“It’s not easy to get everybody in the same room and say, ‘OK, let’s agree on a certain percentage,’” he said of the leaders of tournaments.
“We want more money, (but) they maybe don’t want to give us as much money when we talk about the prize money. There are so many different layers of the prize money that you have to look into. It’s not that simple.”
(Photos: Kelly Delfina / Getty Images, Steven / PA via Getty Images; design: Dan Goldfarb)
Culture
6 New Books We Recommend This Week
Our recommended books this week tilt heavily toward European culture and history, with a new history of the Vikings, a group biography of the Tudor queens’ ladies-in-waiting, a collection of letters from the Romanian-born French poet Paul Celan and a biography of the great German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. We also recommend a fascinating true-crime memoir (written by the criminal in question) and, in fiction, Rebecca Kauffman’s warmhearted new novel about a complicated family. Happy reading. — Gregory Cowles
One of Europe’s most important postwar poets, Celan remains as intriguing as he is perplexing more than 50 years after his death. The autobiographical underpinnings of his work were beyond the reach of general readers until the 1990s, when the thousands of pages of Celan’s letters began to appear. The scholar Bertrand Badiou compiled the poet’s correspondence with his wife, the French graphic artist Gisèle Lestrange-Celan, and that collection is now available for the first time in English, translated by Jason Kavett.
NYRB Poets | Paperback, $28
Wilson’s biography of the German polymath Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) approaches its subject through his masterpiece and life’s work, the verse drama “Faust” — widely considered perhaps the single greatest work of German literature, stuffed to its limits with philosophical and earthy meditations on human existence.
Bloomsbury Continuum | $35
Through a series of vignettes, Kauffman’s fifth novel centers on a woman determined to spend Christmas with her extended family, including her future grandchild and ex-husband, and swivels to take in the perspectives of each family member in turn.
People love the blood-soaked sagas that chronicle the deeds of Viking raiders. But Barraclough, a British historian and broadcaster, looks beyond those soap-opera stories to uncover lesser-known details of Old Norse civilization beginning in A.D. 750 or so.
Norton | $29
Fifteen years ago, Ferrell gained a dubious fame after The New York Observer identified her as the “hipster grifter” who had prowled the Brooklyn bar scene scamming unsuspecting men even as she was wanted in Utah on felony fraud charges. Now older, wiser and released from jail, Ferrell emerges in this captivating, sharp and very funny memoir to detail her path from internet notoriety to self-knowledge.
St. Martin’s | $29
In her lively and vivid group biography of the women who served Henry VIII’s queens, Clarke, a British author and historian, finds a compelling side entrance into the Tudor industrial complex, showing that behind all the grandeur the royal court was human-size and small.
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