Yogi plays chess with Kushagra Agrawal, the youngest FIDE-rated player
Kushagra, who visited the temple on Friday to seek the UP chief minister’s blessings, is just five years and 11 months old and currently a student of UKG.
The 18-year-old International Master from Nagpur has alleged that she endured rampant sexism from spectators at the tournament, saying they “focussed on irrelevant things like her hair, clothes and accent.”
India’s rising chess player Divya Deshmukh has called out the misogyny that women players face routinely while narrating her ordeal at the Tata Steel Chess Tournament at Wijk aan Zee in The Netherlands.
The 18-year-old International Master from Nagpur has alleged that she endured rampant sexism from spectators at the tournament, saying they “focussed on irrelevant things like her hair, clothes and accent.”
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Divya, who won the Asian women’s chess championship last year, shared a lengthy social media post in which she shared the dismay at how the women in the sport are treated by fans.
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“I have been wanting to address this for a while but was waiting for my tournament to be over. I got told and also myself noticed how women in chess are often just taken for granted by spectators,” Deshmukh said. “Most recent example of this on a personal level would be in this tournament, I played a few games which I felt were quite good and I was proud of them.
“I got told by people how the audience was not even bothered with the game but instead focused on every single possible thing in the world: my clothes, hair, accent and every other irrelevant thing,” she wrote in an Instagram post on Sunday.
Competing in the Challengers section of the iconic event, the International Master, who has a standard rating of 2420, finished 12th with a score of 4.5 out of 13 while competing in a field that had players like Hans Niemann and Harika Dronavalli.
The teenager said while male players were getting their share of spotlight purely for their game, the women were judged for aspects which had nothing to do with their ability on the chess board.
“I was quite upset to hear this and I think it is the sad truth that when women play chess they often overlook how good they actually are, the games they play and their strength,” she said.
“I was quite disappointed to see how everything was discussed in my interviews (by the audience) except my games, very few people paid attention to it and it is quite a sad thing.
“I felt it was unfair in a way because if I go to any guy’s interview there would be way less judgement on a personal level, actual compliments about the game and the player,” she asserted.
Despite the progress made in women’s sports in terms of pay scale, female athletes are still subjected to sexist behaviour and are often asked about their outfits.
Divya said women players are under-appreciated in general and often endure hatred.
“…every irrelevant thing is focused on and hated on while guys would probably get away with the same things. I think women face this on a daily basis and I’m barely 18.
“I have faced so much judgement including hatred over the years for things that don’t even matter. I think women should start getting equal respect,” she added.
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