women in sports
There is ample evidence that sports can be a significant driver for maintaining confidence and self-esteem in a person. Sports can teach women and men values like teamwork, resilience and perseverance. Therefore, no matter what your gender is, sports are necessary for all. And in fact, it is not only unisex but it welcomes people regardless of their religion, language, colour or even any kind of physical disability.
Keeping this in mind, the Australian High Commission recently sponsored a five-day cricket training for visually impaired women and girls from across Pakistan, organised in collaboration with the Pakistan Blind Cricket Council (PBCC).
The training builds on Australia’s support to PBCC in the formation of Pakistan’s first blind women cricket team in 2018, which played its first international Twenty20 game last year.
Speaking at the award-giving ceremony at the conclusion of the training, the Australian High Commissioner to Pakistan Dr Geoffrey Shaw shared that Australia’s support aims to provide more women and girls with disabilities the opportunity to enjoy sport, compete and demonstrate their ability.
“Sports can help reduce gender stereotypes and negative perceptions associated with people with disabilities. Australia and Pakistan share a passion for cricket, so we are happy to support the Pakistan Blind Cricket Council’s efforts to bring women and girls living with disabilities into the sport,” Dr Shaw added.
Coach Tahir, who coached the national blind men's team, helped these players push their boundaries. The Chairman of PBCC, Syed Sultan Shah, said, “Cricket for the blind is a highly competitive game which enables people with visual impairment to become people of vision – a vision of an accessible future full of exciting opportunities for all.”
Two blind factory workers invented blind cricket in Melbourne, Australia, in 1922 when they improvised the game using a tin can containing rocks. A few years later, in 1928, the first sports ground and clubhouse for blind cricket was built at Kooyong in Melbourne.
Initiatives like these serve as a morale booster for people with disabilities and evoke a feeling of connectivity with this world among them. Kudos to the commission which has been associated with such a great and thoughtful cause!
– Iqra Sarfaraz