Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Posted: 2017-04-25T01:07:28Z | Updated: 2017-04-25T03:02:00Z

Sixteen-year-old Amaiya Zafar has had to choose between her Muslim faith and her love of boxing in the past. But thanks to a new decision from USA Boxing, the Minnesota teen will no longer have to make that call.

The amateur boxer from the St. Paul area had never gotten the chance to fight in an official competition. As part of her Muslim faith, Zafar chooses to wear a hijab and cover her arms and legs while fighting which isnt approved by international boxing regulations . Shes usually banned from the ring before her matches begin.

But Zafar and her family received news last week that USA Boxing, the national governing body for the sport, was offering her an exemption to its clothing mandate, which requires fighters to wear sleeveless jerseys and shorts.

Boxing is about to get a whole lot better because theyre being inclusive of a whole group of people who couldnt compete before, the high schooler told NBC News on Sunday.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations, a leading Muslim advocacy organization, released a statement applauding the decision. This is a positive step forward in the continuing struggle for religious freedom in our state and nation, Jaylani Hussein, the executive director of CAIR-MN, said in the release.

Zafar is the first boxer to receive the benefits of a new rule regarding religious exemptions that the USA Boxing board of directors is expected to adopt in June, according to CAIR. The rule will apply only to local non-advancing matched bouts, and a request for a religious exemption must be made for each event in which the boxer wishes to participate.

USA Boxing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Zafar is scheduled to compete at the Spring Fling Amateur Boxing match on April 29 in Minneapolis. She will be the first boxer fighting in a USA Boxing-sanctioned event in a hijab, CAIR said.

She earned the right to showcase her skills, and Im happy for her. But its just the first step in letting her achieve her dreams.

- Nathaniel Haile, Amaiya Zafar's boxing coach

This is a big step, Zafars coach, Nathaniel Haile, told the Star Tribune . Shes put a lot of labor into this. She earned the right to showcase her skills, and Im happy for her. But its just the first step in letting her achieve her dreams.

The teen hopes to compete at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, though shell have to fight for her right to wear modest attire there, too. The international boxing association, AIBA, will have to modify its uniform requirements for Zafar and others who prefer to wear religious or modest clothing to be able to compete abroad.

Ibrahim Hooper, CAIRs director of communications, said in a statement: We welcome this partial victory and look forward to the day when athletes of all faiths may compete nationally and internationally while maintaining their religious principles.