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US Muslim Boxer Wins Right to Compete in Hijab

OAKDALE โ€“ An American Muslim teenager from Oakdale, Minnesota, will be the first athlete to fight while wearing hijab in a sanctioned American boxing event after USA Boxing, the sportโ€™s national governing body, decided to lift its ban on the outfit.

โ€œI was shocked. I thought it was a prank at first,โ€ Amaiya Zafar, 16-year-old high school junior, told NBC News on Sunday, April 23.

โ€œBoxing is about to get a whole lot better because theyโ€™re being inclusive of a whole group of people who couldnโ€™t compete before.โ€

The Center on American-Islamic Relations, which announced the rule change, said USA Boxing will formally adopt its new religious exemption rule in June, but is granting a waiver to Zafar.

Zafar has been waiting nearly two years for an official fight since first seeking a rule change in 2015.

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She was barred at the last minute from a November 20 bout at the Sugar Bert Boxing National Championships in Kissimmee, Florida.

USA Boxing officials say that boxers must wear only a sleeveless jersey and shorts, so everyone has a clear view of fightersโ€™ arms and legs.

โ€œItโ€™s my sport. Iโ€™m the one who puts in the work everyday,โ€ she said.

โ€œThe rule wasnโ€™t made to discriminate against me, but it was and they werenโ€™t fixing it. But I appreciate the work [USA Boxing] put in to change it.โ€

Under the new regulation, CAIR said that โ€œa request for religions exemption must be made for each event in which the boxer wishes to participate.โ€

In a statement, CAIR cheered Zafarโ€™s victory as a โ€œstep forward in the continuing struggle for religious freedom in our state and nation.โ€

The challenges facing the young Muslim boxer are not over, as she will have to overcome the International Boxing Associationโ€™s ban on hijabs.

Zafar wonโ€™t be able to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics without changes to the world governing bodyโ€™s uniform guidelines.

Mara Gubuan, co-founder of Muslim female athlete advocacy organization Shirzanan, is hopeful that the change will come soon.

โ€œThe exemption issued by USA Boxing is a significant advancement for observant Muslim females,โ€ Gubuan told NBC News.

โ€œI trust the [the international governing body] will reinforce this act of inclusion by modifying their rule as well.โ€