![I'm an athlete, and I happen to wear a hijab. Get over it](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6242221.1636457365!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/fairouz-gaballa.jpg)
I'm an athlete, and I happen to wear a hijab. Get over it
CBC
There are moments when I'm running when I feel out of sorts and completely different from everyone around me.
I wear a hijab and you don't see many others wearing them on the track — or in other places on Prince Edward Island.
However, there are other times when I forget that I look different from everyone else because I feel so comfortable doing something that makes me feel good about myself.
There are a lot of people who genuinely believe that women are oppressed in the Islamic faith. A hijab — a head covering that many Muslim women wear — is perceived by some as symbol of oppression.
When I first began wearing my hijab in Grade 8, it was just a religious act. But a few years down the road, it became who I was — a sweet proclamation of my identity in the face of Islamophobia.
There are awesome things that come from wearing a hijab — like never having another bad hair day. But in a western society, there are a few setbacks to wearing a hijab. Aside from the prejudice and discrimination I face regularly, I realized that aren't many athletes who are also hijabis.
When I started wearing my hijab, my life changed drastically.
I went from having friends to having no friends, from people thinking I was of mixed race (because of my pre-hijab appearance) to people automatically assuming I must have been a refugee from Syria who spoke no English. I had immigrated as a child from Egypt, but I grew up on P.E.I., and I speak English fluently with a Canadian accent.
Whether anyone decides to admit it or not, there are some teachers and kids who discriminate against students who are different.
I went from being a friend to a "terrorist" or a "towel head." People avoided me. Living on P.E.I. was especially hard because the Island at the time was not as diverse as it is now.
Fast forward to 2021, and there are still bigots who think any individual who wears a hijab is automatically a refugee or a "terrorist" or some terrible human being.
While wearing a hijab, I've been part of two sports. From 2016 until 2020, I was part of Charlottetown Martial Arts where I competed in many tournaments and a couple of championships. Aside from myself and my sister, there was only one other female competitor who wore a hijab, and she wasn't from P.E.I.
I joined the track team in my last year of high school in 2019, and I've been running ever since. I'm now on the women's distance team at UPEI. I'm again the only athlete on my team who wears a hijab.
Sometimes, when I'm running, all some people do is stare, and not the "hmm … cool" kind of stare. Those stares lead to a smile, and then those people go on with their day. These stares are different: eyebrows pinch together, mouths open, heads turn and follow me as I move. There are no smiles, and it's uncomfortably awkward.