A bout of triumph in loss for Saudi Arabian athlete

August 03, 2012 05:13 pm | Updated August 04, 2012 03:54 am IST - London

Saudi Arabia's Wojdan Shaherkani (right) competes with Puerto Rico’s Melissa Mojica in their judo match in London on Friday. Photo: AP

Saudi Arabia's Wojdan Shaherkani (right) competes with Puerto Rico’s Melissa Mojica in their judo match in London on Friday. Photo: AP

It was over in little more than a minute on Friday, but it will go down as one of the most memorable moments of the London Games. Wojdan Ali Seraj Abdulrahim Shahrkhani was one of just two women competing for Saudi Arabia at the games, the first time the Gulf state has sent female athletes at all.

She was only able to compete in judo after a compromise between Olympic organizers, the international judo federation and Saudi officials that cleared the way for her to wear a modified hijab .

The crowd roared as Ms. Shahrkhani stepped onto the mat for her fight against Puerto Rico’s Melissa Mojica, wearing judo dress and what appeared to be a tight-fitting black cap.

The drama was not in seeing who would win. In a competition where everyone else holds a high-level black belt, Ms. Shahrkhani has only attained a blue.

On the mat, the Saudi looked tentative and cautious on her feet, unwilling to grab Ms. Mojica’s uniform and making little attempt to throw her off balance.

The two heavyweights circled each other for about a minute before Ms. Mojica, the 24th-ranked judo fighter in the world in her weight class, grabbed Ms. Shahrkhani with a secure grip on her collar and flipped her onto her back, ending the match in 82 seconds.

As she rose to her feet, Ms. Shahrkhani gently reached for her head to make sure the hijab was still in place. It was, and the two women bowed to each other and left to a loud ovation.

Afterward, the teenager whose age is given as 16 by Olympic organisers, but 17 or 18 by her father, and 19 on the Saudi Olympic website, walked with her father past journalists and TV cameras.

“I am happy to be at the Olympics,” she whispered in Arabic, her brother, Hassan, holding both her arms.

“Unfortunately, we did not win a medal, but in the future we will and I will be a star for women’s participation.”

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