“People used to tell me my hair was ‘too big’ for the cap – never that the cap was too small for my hair,” Alice Dearing wrote.

The International Swimming Federation (FINA) is considering reversing their decision to deny certification for swimming caps designed for natural Black hair following backlash.

This comes after a Soul Cap swimming cap worn by 24-year-old Alice Dearing,who recently became the first Black female swimmer to represent Great Britain at the Olympics, was rejected by FINA, according to The Times.

Dearing recently spoke about the decision on Sky Sports News, saying, “The issue with this story is I don’t want little Black girls and little Black boys to look at elite swimming and think it is not open to them because that is completely the wrong idea. It is open to them, I really hope that with it being under review that some agreement will come about, I’m sure it will.”

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She continued, “I don’t want people to look at elite level swimming and think: ‘It’s not open for me, I can’t wear my hair the way I want to and I’ll go and find another sport’, because that’s not what we want. Change is happening at least, Soul Cap has been made and even something as simple as that wasn’t around when I started out swimming.”

Manchester International Swimming Meet 2021 - Day 2

Alice Dearing of Great Britain looks on prior to the Women’s 400 Individual Medley Final on Day 2 of the Manchester International Swimming Meet 2021 at the Manchester Aquatics Centre on February 13, 2021 in Manchester, England. (Photo by Clive Rose/Getty Images)

FINA ruled that the caps, created by Black-owned Soul Cap, did not fit “the natural form of the head” and to their “best knowledge the athletes competing at the international events never used, neither require … caps of such size and configuration,” The Times reported.

Further diving into the issue on Sky Sports News, Dearing explained that her mother use to relax and braid her so that it would fit into traditional swim caps and makes their “lives easier.”

“It’s only when I’ve got older that I could find ways to manage it in its natural form,” she shared. “The issue of Black people in swimming is a heavy topic so I’m happy to be the person to speak about it because I want to make people aware that these stereotypes aren’t acceptable and Black people should feel comfortable at swimming pools.”

“They shouldn’t feel subjugated or discriminated against in any way, so if I can help in any way to make that better and leave the sport one day where I can look back on it and see the difference I’ve made then that’s what I want to do.”

Groups like UK’s Black Swimming Association, which Dearing cofounded, are standing in solidarity and speaking out against the move.

Source: GB’s 1st Black woman swimmer fights Olympic natural hair cap decision

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