Rio De Janeiro - She had a purpose, and a passion, that she could release at long last sitting beside men who have been able to attend the games all along.
Published: Tue 9 Aug 2016, 7:19 PM
Updated: Tue 9 Aug 2016, 9:27 PM
Sajedeh Norouzi jumped to her feet, both arms reached high into the air, beaming as she waved a small Iranian flag from side to side. Again and again. She waved at every chance. She waved for every woman back home who couldn't be there alongside her at Maracanazinho arena cheering for the men's volleyball team in its Olympic debut - her first time in a sports stadium because in Iran women aren't allowed to attend all-male sports events.
The 27-year-old Norouzi, wearing a beautiful navy blue headscarf decorated with flowers of pink, yellow, orange and turquoise, insists she represented all of the other Iranian women on Sunday night who are fighting to one day cheer their teams from the stands and not the TV. She had a purpose, and a passion, that she could release at long last sitting beside men who have been able to attend the games all along. "We want to go to the stadium because the government doesn't allow us to. I want to cheer my team!" Norouzi said, sitting
The 27-year-old Norouzi, wearing a beautiful navy blue headscarf decorated with flowers of pink, yellow, orange and turquoise, insists she represented all of the other Iranian women on Sunday night who are fighting to one day cheer their teams from the stands and not the TV. She had a purpose, and a passion, that she could release at long last sitting beside men who have been able to attend the games all along.
"We want to go to the stadium because the government doesn't allow us to. I want to cheer my team!" Norouzi said, sitting along-side husband Saeed Javdaniyan in a lower section of seats across the court from the team benches of Iran and Argentina. She was overwhelmed by the special moment, one she couldn't have envisioned even a year ago. Iran lost in straight sets. She and her husband have been in Brazil for four months to study, living in Copacabana.
Norouzi called the opportunity for her to be in the arena "really, really big" and an important one to show support from afar for those Iranian women who wanted nothing more than to attend the Rio de Janeiro Olympics. "I think so," she said, "every woman wants to see the games." One of those female sports fans?
A 32-year-old Iranian woman working with a group called Open Stadiums to push for access. The group's Twitter handle has become an underground voice of advocacy for women pushing to end discrimination. "I really wish I could watch it in stadium. It's been very long time that I couldn't watch their matches live," she said.