(27 Aug 2024)
RESTRICTIONS: Use on broadcast and digital channels, including social. Available worldwide. Can be used for the duration of your current contract. No takedown necessary for stand alone digital users. All usage subject to rights licensed in contract. For any questions regarding rights restrictions please contact planning@sntv.com
Bologna, Italy. 19th August 2024.
1. 00:08 Various of Valentina Petrillo during training
2. 00:34 SOUNDBITE (Italian): Valentina Petrillo, Paralympic athlete:
“There are very clear regulations which I respect. And above all I’m legally a woman. My ID says that I am female with a regular female birth certificate. The Italian State has recognized me as a woman and therefore I should be treated as such. In other respects, I have never had any problems with the Paralympic world. They have always included me, and therefore, the Paralympic world saved me because it gave me the chance to be myself, and this is fundamental.”
3. 01:22 Various of Valentina Petrillo during training
4. 01:48 SOUNDBITE (Italian): Valentina Petrillo, Paralympic athlete:
"Unfortunately we still live in a situation where transgender people are marginalized, who will never be able to change a document like I did, who will never be able to get what they deserve, the respect they deserve. And therefore my thoughts go to them, to those who have been less fortunate than me. From now on I’d like to hear beautiful stories of transgender people, of people with disabilities, everybody. And my hope is that from my story they can find the inspiration and the strength to believe a different tomorrow is possible.”
5. 02:38 Various of Valentina Petrillo during training
SOURCE: Associated Press
DURATION: 02:54
STORYLINE:
Valentina Petrillo fell in love with athletics as a seven-year-old while watching Italian sprinter Pietro Mennea win gold in the 200 meters at the 1980 Moscow Olympics.
“I said I wanted to be like him,” said Petrillo, who was assigned as male at birth. “I wanted to put on the blue (Italy) shirt, I wanted to go to the Olympics. But I wanted to do it as a woman because I didn’t feel like a man, I didn’t feel like myself.”
Four decades later, at 50, Petrillo is about to finally realize her dream, but not at the Olympics. In two weeks, she is set to become the first transgender woman to compete at the Paralympics when she runs the 200 and 400 meters in the T12 classification for visually impaired athletes in Paris.
Petrillo, who was diagnosed as a teenager with Stargardt disease, a degenerative eye condition, considers herself lucky despite the challenges she’s faced. She’s lived most of her life as a man and only came out as transgender to her wife — with whom she has a son — in 2017 before beginning hormone therapy two years later.
“In January 2019 I started the transition process and in 2020 I achieved my dream, which was to compete in the women’s category to play the sport that I have always loved,” she told The Associated Press in an interview at a track she trains on in a suburb of Bologna, where she lives.
World Athletics last year banned transgender women from competing in the female category at international events if they transitioned after puberty. But its para counterpart, World Para Athletics, has not followed suit.
In a statement to AP, the WPA said transgender athletes in its women’s competitions are required to declare their gender identity for sporting purposes is female and provide evidence that their testosterone levels have been below 10 nanomoles per liter of blood for at least 12 months prior to their first competition.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Archive
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/APArchives
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/APNews/
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/261866b8ff5545be9aa8ce62e809f188
Author: AP Archive
Go to Source
News post in September 1, 2024, 3:04 pm.
Visit Our Sponsor’s:
News Post In – News