Zimbabwe’s teenage taekwondo trainer Natsiraishe Maritsa wins IOC Women and Sport Award for Africa

Compartir
Compartir articulo

BEIJING, China (Jan. 3, 2022) - Natsiraishe Maritsa, an 18-year-old Taekwondo trainer from Zimbabwe, has today been recognised for her selfless efforts to use Taekwondo to empower young girls in her community, as she was awarded the Winner for Africa at the IOC Women and Sport Awards.

Maritsa drew global attention in 2021 as the story spread of how she was fighting child marriage in Zimbabwe through a combination of Taekwondo and discussions about the dangers of early marriage. Maritsa founded the Vulnerable Underaged People’s Auditorium Initiative in 2018 and teaches young girls taekwondo to instil self-confidence and create a safe space where they can share concerns and experiences and discuss issues such as child pregnancy and gender-based violence and harassment.

Maritsa said:

“Taekwondo tenets empowered me to fight for child marriages and had positive results to people who I impacted the Taekwondo tenets to. With Taekwondo we are indeed champions of freedom, justice and peace.”

Maritsa was nominated for the award by World Taekwondo who, like so many around the world, were inspired by her actions. Maritsa was invited to speak at the 2nd World Taekwondo Gender Equity and Women Leadership Forum in March last year and was one of the highlights of the forum. World Taekwondo has also been working with the Zimbabwe Taekwondo Association and the Korean government-funded Korean Taekwondo Promotion Foundation to send equipment and supplies to support her initiative. World Taekwondo will continue to monitor her journey and provide the necessary help along the way.

World Taekwondo President Chungwon Choue said:

“Natsiraishe thoroughly deserves this award in recognition of the crucial work she is doing in supporting young women in her community. Her determination to reduce inequalities through sport and raise awareness through the global media has also helped these vulnerable women and girls to attend school and receive quality education. It is truly inspirational to witness her contributions to the Sustainable Development Goals and Olympic Agenda.”

The IOC Women and Sport Trophy represents opportunity, recognition and empowerment. Each year, the IOC Women and Sport Awards are given to women, men or organisations who have made remarkable contributions to the development, encouragement and reinforcement of women and girls’ participation in sport.

As a service to our readers, Around the Rings will provide verbatim texts of selected press releases issued by Olympic-related organizations, federations, businesses and sponsors.

These press releases appear as sent to Around the Rings and are not edited for spelling, grammar or punctuation.

Recents Articles

Paris 2024, the Games with 12 billion interactions, 11,000 live hours and automatic replays

After the inauguration of an Artificial Intelligence Olympic Agenda that seeks to empower athletes, the competition and the public, the IOC's Director of Marketing and Digital Engagement, Leandro Larrosa, explains how the links between AI and networks will transform the imminent Olympic experience.

París 2024, los Juegos de las 12 billones de interacciones, 11 mil horas en vivo y repeticiones automáticas

Luego de la inauguración de una Agenda Olímpica de Inteligencia Artificial que busca empoderar a los atletas, la competencia y al público, el director de Marketing y Compromiso Digital del COI, Leandro Larrosa, expone cómo los vínculos entre la IA y las redes transformarán la inminente experiencia olímpica.

Bach: “There will be six to eight Palestinian athletes in Paris”

The top president reported that the IOC will grant invitations if no other athlete manages to qualify; the Arab nation has two guaranteed places, only one achieved since the beginning of the war.

Bach: “Habrá entre seis y ocho atletas palestinos en París”

El máximo mandatario informó que el COI concederá invitaciones si ningún otro atleta consigue clasificarse; la nación árabe tiene dos plazas aseguradas, solo una conseguida desde el inicio de la guerra.

Security in Paris 2024: the “anti-terrorist perimeter” was extended for the opening ceremony

Three months after the parade on the Seine River and hours after the arrest of a 16-year-old teenager, the Paris police established new security measures and stated: “The terrorist threat remains very high, even if there is no concrete threat.”