Tewksbury
hopes Outgames will promote understanding
SOURCE
: Slam!
Sports
par Romina
Maurinol
TORONTO (CP) - Making
competitive sports more welcoming to gay and lesbian
athletes is a powerful way to foster tolerance and understanding,
one of Canada's top gay athletes said Sunday.
Mark Tewksbury, an Olympic gold medallist
and gay rights activist, said sports can be key to affecting
positive change, despite the homophobic stigma some
still associate with the field.
He hopes the First World Outgames, for
which he is co-president, will help create a safe environment
for gay athletes who, like himself, have confronted
prejudice and discrimination because of their sexual
orientation.
"Sport gave me a sense of security
when I was young, but I was still afraid of the consequences
- would my coach stop coaching me, would my teammates
reject me?" he told about 70 people attending a
health conference at the University of Toronto's Athletic
Centre.
"My life was so hard as an athlete
because nobody created a positive space for me,"
Tewksbury said, adding that no soccer, football, hockey,
or baseball player in North America has come out while
actively involved in sports.
Tewksbury has won gold and bronze medals
at the 1992 Olympic Games, a silver at the 1988 Seoul
Olympics and 13 national titles.
The 2006 World Outgames will be held July
29 to Aug. 5 in Montreal to coincide with a human rights
conference and the city's annual Pride Parade.
The games are being organized by the Gay
and Lesbian International Sports Association - a coalition
of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered sports organizations
from around the world.
The Outgames are not to be confused with
the similarly themed Gay Games, which are to be held
July 15 to 22 in Chicago.
Unlike the 20-year-old Gay Games, which
has been plagued by financial woes and is largely supported
by volunteers, Tewksbury said the Outgames have sustained
funding and a paid staff, assuring gay athletes a higher
profile and stronger voice for their issues.
The Outgames has received $1 million in
funding from all three levels of government, and has
lined up big-name sponsors such as Air Canada and Bell.
However, the games are not restricted
to homosexual athletes, said Tewksbury, who noted that
a key goal of the event is to create a positive space
for all athletes to take part in a professional competition.
"You can't make social change happen
in isolation," he said.
"Even if you have the most vibrant
competition, if there's only gay and lesbian people
there, and no one knows about it, then you're never
going to affect real, long-lasting change."
With 14 months to go, the Outgames already
has 5,000 participants from 84 countries.
Tewksbury said he expects 14,000
participants.
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