diversity – Michmutters
Categories
Sports

Esports could be included in Victoria 2026 Commonwealth Games, after inaugural pilot event in Birmingham

Athletes like Emma McKeon, Georgia Godwin and Oliver Hoare have captured Australians’ attention at the Commonwealth Games, and the likes of “Rin”, “Jakino” and “Fern” could one day be up there too.

It is not as fanciful as it may sound. On the final weekend of the Games in Birmingham, the inaugural Commonwealth Esports Championships were held as a pilot to see whether it could be a part of the Games proper.

There are currently 16 sports already confirmed for Victoria 2026, with organizers looking to add three or four more to the final program by the end of September.

“We signed an MOU (memorandum of understanding) with the Global Esports Federation which doesn’t stop after this Games,” Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) chief executive Katie Sadleir said.

“It’s a long-term commitment to learning, transferring knowledge.”

Ms Sadleir said the CGF would conduct an independent review after the Birmingham event to consider what the future of esports at the Games could look like.

“We will evaluate all options and look at what is the best win-win for the partnership,” she said.

“It’s not just about whether or not we would like esports in the Games, it’s also about whether or not esports wants to be inside the Games.”

Exorcisms and dragon slaying the new sporting frontier

People sit behind character avatars at the Commonwealth Esports Championships.
Australia lost to Singapore in the Dota 2 women’s bronze-medal match.(Supplied: Global Esports Federation)

Having watched rowdy crowds pack into venues all over Birmingham to cheer on athletes from Niue to Nigeria, in sports as diverse as weightlifting to rhythmic gymnastics, it feels a little strange stepping into the esports arena.

It is being held at Birmingham’s International Convention Centre, and there is a small crowd gathered to watch Australia and Singapore face off in the women’s Dota 2 bronze-medal match.

Two teams of five are placed on an impressive-looking stage, each player with their own computer and headset, while the multi-player battle arena video game is displayed on a big screen overhead.

There is even a live commentary, albeit pretty different from the typical sports event.

“A lot of Australia’s damage is coming on the exorcism,” one of the commentators says.

Cheers and applause break out when there’s a flurry of activity on the big screen. It is hard to tell what’s going on, but maybe a dragon slaying?

This is different, but that’s the point. The CGF wants to tap into a new, younger audience, who might not traditionally engage in mainstream sport.

And the potential money on offer does not hurt either — the global esports market is currently valued at about $2 billion, dominated by Asia and North America.

There are several different bodies that govern esports. This event is being looked after by the Global Esports Federation (GEF).

The players are not involved with the politics behind the scenes, but they are excited to be on a world stage, just like any athlete representing their country.

Five women wearing green and gold tracksuits stand arm in arm.
Five players represented Australia in the women’s Dota 2 competition.(ABC Sport: Amanda Shalala)

Adelaide’s Lynley-Ann Dodd, or Rin, is a member of the Australian women’s Dota 2 team.

The 29-year-old has been playing games for most of her life and she said the growth of esports meant a lot to people who were not interested in traditional sport.

“I wish I could turn it back and look at my younger self — 13, 14 — when I first started this game and be like, ‘You could do it,’ because I never felt like there was that possibility,” she said.

“I gave up on myself multiple times because there was not that possibility.

“And I think now being able to be a role model for… women, teenagers, children who actually enjoy games, who want to be able to take it seriously, that is the best gift of all from this.”

Women wear headsets while playing competitive esports.
The Australian women’s Dota 2 team enjoyed an opportunity to compete in a big international tournament.(Supplied: Global Esports Federation)

Another member of the Australian team, Sydney’s Antonia “Jakino” Cai, 28, also sees the market value in established sporting organizations engaging with esports.

“Esports is going to be getting bigger over the years as technology gets better, and all the young people will know about it,” she said.

“There’s going to be a lot of money invested into this. We already have tournaments that are [worth] millions of dollars.

“So this is going to be getting bigger and the next step is putting it into the Commonwealth Games or Olympics.”

Can esports be a sport for all?

Women celebrate at the Commonwealth Esports Championships.
Esports are still dominated by men, although women from Asia are leading the way for greater representation.(Supplied: Global Esports Federation)

The Commonwealth Games ethos is about being the friendly and inclusive Games, with a particular focus on women and people with a disability.

And esports has its challenges when it comes to being a truly welcoming environment for women.

“There is that perception that women aren’t as good, and for me I believe it’s since we don’t have that many women in the area,” Sydney’s Kanyarat “Fern” Bupphaves said.

.

Categories
Australia

Parramatta photography captures booming, culturally rich city after severe COVID lockdowns

After months of being locked down and singled out as a coronavirus danger zone, Western Sydney is facing the difficult challenge of bouncing back.

Workers required permits to leave their local area, the community had nightly 9pm curfews, defense personnel were on the streets helping enforce restrictions, and a targeted police operation roamed the areas known as the LGAs of concern.

Despite four months of tough restrictions, the community’s spirit was not broken, and people returned enthusiastically to public spaces in droves.

Photographer Cherine Fahd discovered this as she embarked on her photography project at the end of the 107-day lockdown.

“I wasn’t sure whether people would want to participate, whether they’d want to come onto the stage that we created and take photographs with me. And it was incredible,” Fahd said.

A man in a blue jumpsuit with flares and mask poses outside a football stadium, a woman in red t-shirt holds sun reflector.
One of the multiple photo shoots was held outside Western Sydney Stadium.(Supplied: Cherine Fahd)

“People were really enthusiastic to be part of something creative.”

Setting up photo booths in Parramatta’s public spaces such as Centenary Square and outside Western Sydney Stadium before an Eels game, Fahd captured a cross-section of the community after shooting for more than eight months.

Photographs from Being Together: Parramatta Yearbook (2021–2022) from the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and Parramatta Artists’ Studios are on display in Parramatta’s Centenary Square.

Like a high school yearbook, locals are invited to find themselves in the public artwork.

Parramatta is one of Sydney’s most diverse neighbourhoods. Fahd said the cultural richness that shone in her work de ella came naturally to the project.

A wall of photos and collages in a public square with deep blue skies.
MCA curator Pedro de Almeida says the work puts art outside the typical gallery environment.(Supplied: Cherine Fahd)

“It’s just the people that came and went on the days that we were shooting,” she said.

“Parramatta is diverse, it always has been.”

MCA curator Pedro de Almeida said works like Fahd’s were able to put community front and center outside the typical gallery environment that art usually resided in.

“Fahd has brought her humor and empathy to this year’s project Being Together: Parramatta Years and engaged with Parramatta’s diverse communities,” Mr de Almeida said.

“The result is a special kind of public yearbook that recognizes many of the individuals that shape Parramatta’s identity and celebrates the connections shared between them.”

A time capsule of a changing city

Pounding jackhammers, whirring drills, and reversing trucks make up the soundscape of Parramatta’s center as the area is being transformed into a concrete jungle metropolis.

Construction workers pose for a photograph on a work site.
Fahd says her aim was to foreground the people against the rapid development of the city.(Supplied: Cherine Fahd)

Major infrastructure projects, such as the Parramatta Square project and Sydney Metro, promise to rival the Sydney CBD and represent the rapid development of the city.

Fahd sought to capture this change in the project, which included a photo shoot on the construction site of 5 Parramatta Square, where the new council chambers will be housed.

“One of my aims as an artist was to foreground the people against that backdrop of development,” she said.

“I think we get lost in the excitement of architecture and building and the people can get lost in that.”

Lord Mayor of Parramatta City Council Donna Davis said the artwork did a great job of capturing this moment in time for the city.

“This artwork is a wonderful representation of our city and its people at a significant moment in time — not only in terms of the pandemic but also with respect to the physical transformation of the CBD,” Ms Davis said.

A woman in red t-shirt and two men pose at an outdoor photo shoot.  One man has head leaning on the other guy's shoulder.
Fahd says she was not expecting participants to be so willing to take part.(Supplied: Cherine Fahd)

Beginning of lifelong project

Parramatta Yearbook is likely the beginning of a lifelong project for Fahd, who says she would like to take the concept further afield to other places where a strong sense of community binds people together, particularly through hardship.

Fahd brought up the example of Lismore, which was hit by catastrophic flooding earlier this year.

“You could take it regionally, you could take it overseas, take it into other states and capture various communities,” she said.

“Each community will bring something of themselves and something that’s unique.”

.

Categories
Australia

As an adult, parkour helped Amy Han rediscover the joy of play and her surroundings

Most adults wouldn’t even think of “playing” outside, but with parkour, Amy Han does just that.

Amy is not jumping off any buildings though. She’s there for the softer side of parkour, that almost anyone can do.

“I can’t think of a better way to incorporate movement and exercise and play into life,” she said.

“I don’t really think about it as training, I just think about it as going outside. I’m just going outside to move.”

The discipline was founded in Paris in the 1990s.

“Parkour is based on functional movements like running, climbing, jumping, etc., and in play and curiosity,” Women of Parkour Melbourne coach Kel Glaister said.

loading

“It’s all about using the capacity of your own body to explore and play in your environment.”

‘It felt like being on a playground’

Amy’s introduction to parkour was in a gym room in London, about 10 years ago. A friend invited her to a class because he thought she’d like it. Curious, Amy went along with her friend of hers.

They entered a room full of gymnastics equipment and watched as the instructor moved across the obstacles to get to the other side. Amy had never been sporty, but for the next two hours she moved, people helped her and they helped each other.

“Although it was hard, it didn’t feel like exercise — it felt like being on a playground,” she said.

Amy Han does parkour on some wooden poles in a park
Amy Han does parkour on some wooden poles in a park. (Supplied: Amy Han)

The parkour class came at a pivotal time in Amy’s life when things were heavy and disheartening. She said she connected with parkour in a metaphorical sense.

“I came to this class and [said to myself]: ‘Here are all the obstacles, it doesn’t matter how you go over them, just find your way. It doesn’t matter if you scramble over them, if it takes you a long time, if you have to try a few times, just get through to the end’,” she said.

The power of visibility

After that first class, Amy moved rapidly from participant to instructor, working with Melbourne Parkour for several years.

loading

She said people were often surprised to see her as an instructor because they weren’t expecting a woman. But Amy believes a lot of women stayed because of her.

The taller and stronger male instructors would be able to step up and pop themselves over a wall, but Amy would have to take a big run-up and use a rail as a step before hopping up onto the wall.

“I’d say: ‘This is the way that this person would move over the obstacle because that’s the most-efficient way for them, but for me, I’m going to have to find another way because I’m not 6- foot tall, and I don’t have the same level of upper body strength’,” she explained.

“If you have a female instructor, more girls will join because it shows it’s for them too. And I think that applies for all kinds of diversity.”

Women of Melbourne Parkour is an organization working to diversify the sport.

“It’s a discipline that remains dominated by young men,” Glaister said.

“But there are loads of people and organizations worldwide working to change that, to make space for more people — of all genders, ages, abilities and backgrounds — within parkour.

“Women of Melbourne Parkour is one of those organisations, and we have regular training sessions that [cater for] women and other genders.”

Growing up, Amy said she was told not to do the types of jumping and climbing inherent in parkour because they were dangerous, and she would hurt herself.

However, her brother was never given the same caution.

“For me, it was a huge ‘unlearning’ and almost like a new childhood when I discovered parkour,” she said.

Amy Han coaches a younger girl to do parkour on some concrete steps
Amy Han coaches a younger girl to do parkour on some concrete steps.(Supplied: Amy Han)

For Amy, parkour is more about play and movement than rigid training.

“As adults, we don’t give ourselves permission to play enough,” she said.

“It’s always, ‘I’m going out to train’ or ‘I’m going to the gym’, for a specific purpose. But how many adults just go out to play?”

‘Possible but scary’ — learning how to dance

Amy said she believed in the maxim “find your own way”, not just in parkour, but in life.

There’s a common misconception that parkour is just big jumps and jumping off rooftops.

However, Amy said, parkour was different for each person. It doesn’t have to be about the big jumps. It can also be about smaller movements.

“It can be just walking around on a rail,” she said..

“It can be just going to a playground and finding a challenge for yourself, it can be a park bench. It can be just looking at a park bench and thinking, ‘How many ways can I move over this park bench’?”

Black and white photo of Amy Han doing a handstand against a park bench with the sun and a tree in the background
Amy Han does a handstand against a park bench. (Supplied: Mel Lyons Photography)

Amy’s favorite technique, she said, was balancing. She walks on rails a lot and, often, if she’s on her own de ella, she’ll go to a local oval and set herself the challenge of walking on the fence around the oval without falling off.

“You need to be strong, but you need to have fun with it. It’s just a balance of all different things,” she said.

Amy said it was also about gaining the confidence to approach things that might look uncomfortable, with the knowledge that they were still possible.

“Every training session I try to find that point where it looks possible but scary,” she said.

Parkour is also about learning how to dance.

If Amy slightly misses a jump, she knows how to fall in a way that doesn’t end in hurting herself.

This means reminding herself that the worst thing that can happen is landing on her bum.

“In parkour, you will fall sometimes, but we learn very early how to fall,” she said.

Existing fitness base isn’t necessary

While many people believe they need to get fit before they start parkour, Amy said that was not the case.

“You get stronger by starting,” she said. “Just start. Everybody in the parkour community is super friendly. If you feel drawn to it, just give it a try.”

She recommended finding your local community or classes, like Women of Parkour Melbourne.

Amy Han smiles and stretches in front of the Melbourne museum as a woman looks on
Amy Han stretches in front of the Melbourne museum as a woman looks on. (Supplied: Scott Bickle)

These days, there’s an increasing variety of male and female instructors who come from all different backgrounds.

Amy said it would be fantastic to see more girls and women involved in the sport.

.