How do you / should you deal with homophobia in your sport or team?

 

 

This weeks #womenswednesday is in light of the Open Letter tennis legend and human rights activist Martina Navratilova wrote to Margaret Court after she shared her views on gay marriage last week.

The 74 year-old founder of Victory Life Church in Perth (Australia), announced in the West Australian Newspaper on Thursday that she would stop using Qantas  “where possible” in protest at the airline’s promotion of same-sex marriage.  Following this, she went on to describe transgender children as “the work of the devil” and stated that “tennis is full of lesbians”.  Court now claims to be a victim of a US led conspiracy to remove her name from Australia’s famous tennis stadium.

Martina Navratilova – a true champion, of tennis, wrote an open letter to Margaret Court stating “It is now clear exactly who Court is: an amazing tennis player, and a racist and a homophobe.”

As coaches around the World, we wanted to ask your views about this issue and find out how you may have dealt with such comments, or how you would deal with homophobia in your sport?

  • Do you address the issue with your whole team?
  • How to you empower your gay players?
  • Do you have zero tolerance for homophobia in your team?
  • Have you faced homophobia as a coach?

 

 


Martina’s Open Letter to Margaret Court:

 

Dear Margaret Court Arena,

Sporting venues named for athletes, or any place, really, named for whoever, are so named for one reason. That reason is their whole body of work. In other words, it is not just for what this person did on the field, on the court, in politics, arts or science, for instance, but also for who they are as human beings.

When you were named after Margaret Court, it seemed like the right thing to do. After all, Rod Laver already had the big stadium and Court is one of the all-time greats. I had long ago forgiven Court for her headline-grabbing comments in 1990 when she said I was a bad role model because I was a lesbian.

What I did not know about until now were the unabashed racist statements she made in the ’70s about apartheid in South Africa. Saying that South Africa dealt with the “situation” (meaning people of colour) much better than anywhere else in the world, particularly the US: what exactly did she mean by that?

Fast forward to today and Court’s announcement of her boycott of Qantas because of its chief executive’s support of same-sex marriage, which basically means support for the LGBT community in general. That was bad enough. Now she is doubling down with her ridiculous comments about older women luring young girls on the tour to parties to turn them into lesbians. It’s a good thing she didn’t name anyone as I am pretty sure she would be sued for defamation.

It is now clear exactly who Court is: an amazing tennis player, and a racist and a homophobe. Her vitriol is not just an opinion. She is actively trying to keep LGBT people from getting equal rights (note to Court: we are human beings, too). She is demonising trans kids and trans adults everywhere.

And now, linking LGBT to Nazis, communists, the devil? This is not OK. This is in fact sick and it is dangerous. Kids will suffer more because of this continuous bashing and stigmatising of our LGBT community.

How much blood will be on Margaret’s hands because kids will continue to get beaten for being different? This is not OK. Too many will die by suicide because of this kind of intolerance, this kind of bashing and yes, this kind of bullying. This is not OK.

We celebrate free speech, but that doesn’t mean it is free of consequences – not punishment, but consequences.

We should not be celebrating this kind of behaviour, this kind of philosophy. The platform people like Margaret Court use needs to be made smaller, not bigger.

Which is why I think it’s time to change your name. And I think the Evonne Goolagong Arena has a great ring to it. Now there is a person we can all celebrate. On every level.

Yours,

Martina Navratilova

 

 

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