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Caster Semenya
Caster Semenya

At the Athletics World Championship in Berlin last week, a shy black 18 year old female athlete from South Africa, won the womens 800m – setting the fastest time in the world this year.  The win was no surprise to those who had followed the early rounds of the 800 metres.  The teenager from a tiny village in Limpopo province has shown her talent but the world’s media, at first surprised at her times, decided to take a closer look and then events became uncomfortable for Caster Semenya.

Only hours before the race, it was announced that the IAAF (International Association of Athletics Federations) had instigated  gender testing for Caster Semenya.  South Africans were appalled, it was insensitive nd humiliating to the young athlete, did they have to go public, the charges and accusations came thick and fast, not only from South Africa.

Was this course of action within the rules of the IAAF ? Yes it was. The IAAF ceased gender screening for all athletes in 1992 but retains the option of assessing the gender of a participant should suspicions arise – Wikipedia. Suspicions had arisen, it was therefore within their remit to order a gender test.

There was not the usual post-race interview for Semenya, she was bundled away by the South African authorities.  The waiting media were denied the opportunity of hearing her reputed deep masculine voice or a closer inspection of a blush of facial hair.

On her return to South Africa there was no attempt to hide her away.  She was among friends.  The airport was crowded to welcome home South Africa’s “golden girl”.  Political opportunists were quick on the scene, they never let a crisis go to waste.

Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Nelson Mandela’s ex wife was there to call her “my grandchild,” she elaborated “we are here to tell the whole world how proud we are of our little girl, they can write what they like we are proud of her”.  South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma was even more robust he said” They’re not going to remove the gold medal.  She won it.  So the question does not arise.”

Leonard Chuene the head of Athletics South Africa who had resigned his seat on the IAAF over the Semeya issue broadened the situation…”We are not going to allow Europeans to describe and defeat our children.”  Julius Malema – who heads the ANC (African National Congress) Youth League decided to go the racist route ” Calls for Semenya to be tested he said “were made solely because she was black and had surpassed her European competitors”.

With the tone now set in stone, preliminary tests indicated her – Semenya’s- testosterone levels were three times higher than ordinarily present in a woman”.  However, tests have not been “completed” they are expected to take weeks.

Is there any valid reason for the IAAF’s gender screening?  What is the history of gender screening?

  1. In 1936 after the Summer Olympics in Berlin, Avery Brundage of the United States Olympic Committee said a system should be established to examine female athletes.  There was concern at the time about *”hemaphrodites” and Brundage felt there was a need to clarify “sex ambiguities”.  He had seen the performance of Czechoslovak runner and jumper Zdenka Konbkova and English shot putter and javelin thrower Mary Edith Louise Weston.”  Both individuals later had sex change surgery and legally changed their names to Zdenek Koubek and Mark Weston.”
  2. “There was also the case of Stanislawa Walasiewicz – perhaps the earliest – ” who won a gold medal in the women’s 100m at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, but who after death in 1980 was discovered to have had partially developed male genitalia.  However, the presence of genitalia is not regarded as absolute evidence of a persons sex.”
  3. “The Polish athlete Ewa Klobukowska who won the gold medal in the women’s 4x100m relay in the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo failed a gender test in 1967.  She was found to have a  rare genetic condition which gave her no advantage over other athletes but was nonetheless banned from competing at the Olympics and Professional Sports.  Also there was Indian middle distance runner Santhi Soundarajan who won the silver medal in the 800m at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar she failed the sex verification test and was stripped of her medal”.
  4. “Sex verification has long been criticized by geneticists, endocrinologists, and others in the medical community.  One major problem was unfairly excluding women who had a birth defect involving gonards and external genitalia (i,e., male pseudohermagph roditism)”

The case of Caster Semenya has a world wide audience, an 18 year old girl from a small village in Limpopo province, South Africa, set off to run at the World Athletic Championships in Berlin 2009.  Little did she know how close an examination there would be, not only of her running but of herself   Racism, “perhaps” a European perspective of what males and females should look like, have all been thrown into the mix.

Behind it all is a young Black African girl waiting for results, which will determine how the world sees her.  We wait for results which will be over for us in a flash, then yesterday’s news, but for Caster Semenya they will be with her for the rest of her life.


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233 responses to “Gold, Race And A Question Of Gender: Caster Semenya”


  1. again I will try to open your eyes to the world we live in …what are the chances that the ANOGRAM of
    Caster Semenya
    is
    YES A SECRET MAN


  2. raptuready,
    you don’t think that this investigation or tests or whatever should’ve been carried out before she participated in the Olympics or what ever it was? to look at her, she looks more masculine and her breast is merely two little dots just like a man. I feel sorry for her and the stigma that will follow her for a long time because of the ignorance of man. she is not responsible for how she was created. Lord have mercy man. Christ.
    No one should take pleasure in disclosing this sort of info about her after all the publicity. Shame,shame, shame. It could’ve been handled professionally. Christ man.

    Caster,
    If you happen to stumble upon this blog just remember that we empathize with your situation and we are still proud of you, Sista. No one’s perfect. Just keep up your running and keep on keeping on.


  3. Sep 10, 2009 06:54 PM
    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    SYDNEY–World 800-metre champion Caster Semenya of South Africa has male and female sexual organs, the Sydney Morning Herald reported Friday, posing an ethical and political quandary for world track and field’s ruling body.

    The Herald said extensive physical examinations of the 18-year-old runner ordered by the IAAF have shown she is technically a hermaphrodite.

    Medical reports indicate she has no ovaries, but rather has internal male testes, which are producing large amounts of testosterone.

    The newspaper said the IAAF was trying to contact the athlete to inform her of the results.


  4. She is not alone.

    This may not be as uncommon as we think.

    Because after all who tests masculine seeming, teachers,or doctors, or lawyers etc.,

    nobody.

    She evidently has female looking external genitalia and has been socialized as female, so I say leave her alone.

    She could well be our daughter, or granddaughter, or our sister or our niece.

    Leave her alone.


  5. The S. Africans have succeeded in making the biggest fools of themselves to the whole world, which is no more than I knew already, anyway!


  6. Re Medical reports indicate she has no ovaries, but rather has internal male testes, which are producing large amounts of testosterone.

    ——————
    The fact that this girl has no ovaries explains her lack of femininity in the presence of high tstosterone levels; setting her apart from those females who take testerone but still look like females.

    The solution is to remove the testes as undescended are prone to become malignant, give her small doses of estrogens and she can live as a woman.

    By the way testes are always male! LOL No need to call them male testes are there are no female testes.


  7. Dear Goergie Porgie:

    Since you are a Christian man and a doctor how does this reconcile with the traditional Christian teaching that God created “male and female created he them”

    Because she is no doubt a child of God and God is still the Creator is he not?

  8. mash up & buy back Avatar
    mash up & buy back

    Perhaps we should test our L.O.OP.

    Settle it once and for all.


  9. Re Dear Goergie Porgie:

    Since you are a Christian man and a doctor how does this reconcile with the traditional Christian teaching that God created “male and female created he them”

    Because she is no doubt a child of God and God is still the Creator is he not?
    ===========================
    There is no discrepancy here Sir. God did in fact created “male and female” as you said.

    Embryologically males and females develop similarly, until a point where differentiation occurs. For a number of reasons it is possible for such differentiation to be complete or to be abberrant- as in this case.

    God is still the creator YES.
    There is a difference between a creature of God and a child of God.
    But that is a theological issue.


  10. Georgie, congrats again on being a medical doctor. Care to make any comment on the dirth of afro caribbean doctors in the UK? Have you any or much medical, experience of the UK?


  11. Bimbro
    In the past most Carribean doctors were trained in the UK, and some even stayed and worked there.

    The UWI was founded in 1948 as a college of the Iniversity of London, mainly because of a lack of doctors in the region as determined by the Moyne Commission. The Faculty of Medicine was thus the first school.

    In 1962 the UWI became independent and had its charter to grant its own degrees.

    Gradually since 1948 more and more Caribbean doctors have been trained in the West Indies. However, a number of Caribbean folk still go to the UK to be trained.

    In recent times, many Carribean folk also train in the USA. So basically we have gone to a situation where probably 98-99 % of our doctors were trained in the UK to one in which well over 90% are trained at UWI.

    Thus it is easy to think that fewer and fewer Carribbean doctors will be found in the UK.


  12. Hi George, thanks for that info, which is invaluable and, I certainly did n’t know before. However, I was more referring to young people of West Indian parentage who were born here in the past 50 or so years. Hardly any of them seem to go into the professions whereas millions of asians and other nationalities do. I could almost give-up on my people. It seems as though they only want to be hair-dressers, barbers, rappers and footballers! Anyway, I want to try to forget about those idiots. G, do you still practice, at all, these days or assist in the training of young doctors in the W. Indies and, would that be in Bim or all over the region. Also, G, is the branch of the UWI to which you referred, situated in Bim!


  13. Actually I am semi retired. In recent years I have been teaching in American type offshore medical schools in the Caribbean.

    I dont know much about the offspring of Caribbean nationals in the UK or thier academic prowess or the lack thereof.


  14. Now the International Medical heavyweights are into the mix on the Caster Semenya case. However, our own (BU, Barbados Underground) resident advisor Dr. Georgie Porgie gave us some “sterling” information some time ago.

    Well done to you Sir.


  15. More balls are being dropped in the Semenya case. Read today’s Times (London), http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/more_sport/athletics/article6840356.ece: South Africa’s athletics authority carried out gender tests on the runner Caster Semenya before she travelled to Berlin last month, establishing that she had internal testes but withholded the findings.

    More sterling work being done by UK journalists as they pound the beat to earn their crust.


  16. oh dear, Rickey George,
    the Dahomey syndrome (as in the old Kingdom of Dahomey) slaps us again. The South Africans wanted gold at any price.


  17. Rickey

    Was that pun intended or not?


  18. Ah, the South African athletics chief now apologises. See

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/athletics/8261566.stm

    So who really let poor Caster down?!


  19. According to reports from South Africa Caster Semenya is now in hiding.
    On 29, August 2009, I concluded my submission with:

    …”Behind it all is a young Black African girl waiting for results, which will determine how the world sees her. We wait for results which will be over for us in a flash, then yesterday’s news, but for Caster Semenya they will be with her for the rest of her life”

    When I wrote those words after her euphoric success; it was not clairvoyance that saw the lengthening dark shadows.


  20. Yardbroom, yes this is sad news indeed.

    And the South African athletics must take the blame.

    Again, the ‘uncertainty’ on the issue is making things worse.

    ‘We’ are hearing (unofficially), that there are undescended testicles, but that they are not active such that they will affect the hormonal balance in Caster????

    Georgie Porgie will have to enlighten us as to the accuracy of this possibility.

    Georgie,

    Is it possible to have undescended testicles, that do NOT affect hormonal balances?

    I guess it depends on her particular body?

    Now, for us laymen, this brings further questions, that cannot be answered until the full extent of her body design are known.

    Unfortunately, neither does this absolve the South African athletics and coaches from the possibility of exogeneous hormone use?

    The latest news has merely created more distrust of those same officials.

    I sympathise with the IAAF in its quest to make fair the competitions, with such exhibits for officials as is now shown.

    Lastly, as Yardbroom says, significant embarrassment has come the the young lady, that at any age, let alone her age, can be very trying.

    I do think however, that to be fair to her and to take this forward without further spotlighting the poor girl, after relevant tests are completed, it will be important to highlight the issue as being about ethics in sport, rather than leaving it as being just about her.

    Peace


  21. Knowing Africans as well as I do, I suspect he knew all along he was a man and hoped to dupe the world, indefinitely. Anything to achieve wealth hopefully, without being found out. Sounds typical to me!!


  22. Hi Bimbro,

    With due respect, despite your experiences (difficult I know to push personal experiences away, as they are fact to oneself), that is a rather harsh generalisation, that we must stay clear of.

    Can we take each individual as we find them?

    Peace


  23. Thank you George and Rump. George, to say the least, it’s abysmal. I’ve been acquainted with 2-3 W.I. medical doctors in about 40 yrs whilst they’re thousands of Asian and other!!

    Rump, u can take that approach if u like. It’s the attitude of the man wanting to be fair and give everybody ‘the benefit of the doubt’ but it’s that same willingness to be fair which will cause u to be their victim!!


  24. @ Rumple
    Re Georgie,

    Is it possible to have undescended testicles, that do NOT affect hormonal balances?

    We know that undescended testes will not produce effective spermatazoa. Testes need to descend into the scrotum where the temperature is ideal for spermatogenesisis.

    What is clear is that Caster has been exhibiting the MALE phenotype because testosterone is being made in normal amounts for MANY women. However, the testosterone is not being converted to oestrogens as is the norm in women. This is why she is not exhibitinf the female phenotype. Also she has no ovaries to secrete any hormones at all.

    I suspect that she has very low progesterone levels (since progesterone is the precursor of testosterone), testosterone on the higher side of what is normally seen in many women, and probably no oetrogens at all!

    So in the absence of low estrogen and progeseterone levels, her testosterone levels are predominating. Hence the inbalance.

    Clearly the South Africans mishandled this situation very poorly, and she is recieving very little sympathy from the ignorant masses all over the world.


  25. @Georgie

    Thanks for your reply.

    Peace


  26. @ Georgie,

    I am assuming she went to a medical doctor sometime in her teens. I also assume the South African athletics organisation would have doctors. When this child reached 15 or even 16 with no breasts and no period, would that not have been a flag to do some tests?

    Even if her parents are backward or uneducated, she has a younger sister, surely this sister developed normally. In some African cultures puberty is celebrated with gifts of money, jewelery and a feast (killing of a goat), was it not strange that she never went through it, even if her culture does no big celeb?

    I find it strange and stranger, that no one in authority suspected anything. Having said that, I know of two Canadian women who had no breasts -. One was skinny the other medium build. The skinny one did not even have what we called bee stings. The other one had two knobs the size of marbles. They both felt incomplete and may be even inferior. They both wore their clothes too big.


  27. Pat // September 21, 2009 at 8:36 PM

    @ Georgie,

    “I am assuming she went to a medical doctor sometime in her teens.”

    Well Pat, you know what they say about (ass)uming.


  28. BIMs my Bro

    Caster is female


  29. Many girls breasts don t develop normally.

    Small breats and amenorrhoea is common in atheletes and sports women.

    Menarche can occur as late as 18 in some cultures.

    Then we migh consider aplasia or hypoplasia.

    And it is not uncommon for anomalies and uncommon things not to be picked up early- unless there is serious illness- which brings things to the fore.

    If the girl was not poorly handled, we would never have heard about her.


  30. Pat wrote at 8:36 “When this child reached 15 or even 16 with no breasts and no period, would that not have been a flag to do some tests? ”

    I have a dear friend who had no period until well after her 16th birthday., and because she was a small girl hardly any breasts either. She is now the natural mother of 2 grown sons. And no she was not taken to the doctor because of the lack of a period. Poor rural people (and Caster is from a poor rural village) do not run to the doctor unless a child is seriously ill, and to all appearances Caster is healthy and hearty. Also it is not that unusual for female athletes to lose their period when they are in intense training.

    I am sure that both Caster and her parents were completely unaware of her true situation.

    I


  31. Caster Semenya returns to the track after a 11 month absence with a win in the womens 800 m at the Lappeenranta games in Finland yesterday.

    “Blurring the lines.

    The controversy over Caster Semenya’s sex has cast light on the biological complexities that can blur the lines between male and female.

    The results of her tests are not being made public, but the IAAF may have found Semenya to be a clear-cut female, but rare medical conditions can make it extremely difficult to reach a conclusion.

    The tests involved include psychological, hormon and gynaecological examinations.

    In general, humans have 46 chromosomes. Most women have two X chromosomes while most men have one X and one Y.

    On rare occasions, a baby born genetically male ( that is, with X and Y sex chromosomes) does not grow up to become a man.

    A Condition called androgen insenitivity syndrome (AIS) prevents their body from responsing to male hormones in their blood, and they develop female genitalia. Those who have the condition will have no sport advantage over genetic females”.

    Ian Sample
    Guardian, London, Friday 16 July, 2010.


  32. Caster denies pregnancy talk2013-02-27 13:42
    Cape Town – South African 800m star Caster Semenya has denied rumours circulating on social networks that she is pregnant, according to a report on the Sowetanlive website.
    “I heard of that, I am not fazed by such allegations, like I said I am focused on the championships (14th IAAF World Championships in Russia), people can say what they want”.
    Meanwhile, Semenya highlighted her enthusiasm ahead of the championships in Moscow from August 10-18.
    Semenya said: “As a 800m runner the most important thing is speed and that’s what my coach (Maria Mutola) and I have been really working on”.
    This comes after she had to settle for a silver medal at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.
    “I will be focusing only on the 800m event; not more or less as many thought” Caster added.
    Asked what South Africa must expect of her at the championships, Caster said “Just like the Orlando Pirates and Maluti FET College match, that score (4-1 in favour of Maluti) was unpredictable. So that goes to show that you never know the strength of your opponent. Anything can happen but I am working towards winning”.
    http://www.sport24.co.za/OtherSport/Athletics/Semenya-denies-pregnancy-talk-20130227


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