Video of the event in March 2022 shows a judge handing out medals for participation to a line of young gymnasts, but ignoring the only black girl. A photographer, coach and other officials fail to intervene. A mediation settlement reached with the family involved the judge taking anti-racism training.

  • I don’t understand it, seriously. I can understand that some people are racist. What I don’t understand is how he can’t pretend he’s not racist when cameras are pointed at him. Seriously, it’s not that hard - there are a few clients I hate to get on a call with but they all love me because I’m always polite and helpful, because that’s part of my fucking job.

    • “Racism is bad. I’m a good person. Therefore what I did wasn’t racism.”

      But yeah, it’s infuriating when bigots can be absolutely unequivocally bigoted, and then casually say “not bigoted tho” like it’s a spell that absolves them of guilt.

    • That’s systemic racism. The judge probably didn’t get up and thought “let’s not give a medal to the black kid”. She just passively didn’t perceive her as someone that would be worthy to get a medal or that should be noted.

    • I don’t understand how people are racist and obviously proud amongst their friends, but in public they hide it, often pathetically. How can you believe in something you have to hide from the public. Say what you think then, i’m not giving the n-word girl a medal, that’s what you think.

    •  apis   ( @apis@beehaw.org ) 
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      39 months ago

      The way she starts beaming even more the clearer the situation becomes just kills me.

      By contrast, I like how the child to her immediate right seems to be wondering why she wasn’t given a medal, and looks around as if she’s hoping to summon someone’s attention to address the problem. She looks too young to twig the reason for the omission, but she sure seems to get that this is not how things should go down.

  • None of these organisations made any public comment on the girl’s treatment at the time and it would be another year before the family got an apology from Gymnastics Ireland, after the video went viral internationally.

    Holy shit. A fucking year? And obviously only after this thing went viral. They just hoped that nobody paid enough attention and that it would all blow over. And no comment during this happening. Disgraceful behaviour.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Una May, the CEO of Sports Ireland, said the judge who ignored the only black gymnast in the competition lineup had got the medals “tangled up”, in comments witnessed by at least two people outside the family.

    In her initial emails the girl’s mother was clear that she was worried about systemic racism and the safety of all young athletes in the sport, and was not only seeking a response to the distress and pain her daughter had endured.

    None of these organisations made any public comment on the girl’s treatment at the time and it would be another year before the family got an apology from Gymnastics Ireland, after the video went viral internationally.

    The Department of Tourism, Culture, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media said it had asked for an investigation as soon as it heard about the incident and condemned the slow response from Gymnastics Ireland.

    McCue said the apology from Gymnastics Ireland did not go far enough, and the executive staff needed to attend anti-racism training sessions to understand the harm such incidents did and protect young athletes.

    Ogden also said the official response to the video in Ireland, which has largely focused on the behaviour of the individual handing out medals, failed to capture systemic issues.


    The original article contains 882 words, the summary contains 209 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • I find myself feeling really bad for both the kid and the person handing out the medal.

    In a room full of one skin colour and one or two outliers, I can imagine myself being socially clumsy enough to not see them at first and then feel too embarrassed or scared to admit why I overlooked them. I bet it’s even happened to me.

    The organisation made an entire mess of this and made the life’s of all concerned more painful.

    •  ialvoi   ( @ialvoi@feddit.de ) 
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      119 months ago

      It seems you kind of understood systemic racism. The person who looks different than the 20 people next to them will experience this on the regular. Which, considering it objectively, is shitty for them to happen to and shitty to be done by the rest.

      • Yes, I assume if this happens once then it happens more regularly. It sounds absolutely draining.

        I think people don’t realise that racism doesn’t just mean intentional and pre-meditated behaviour, but also inherent biases. Biases that we should really be educated on to make the lives of our fellow humans better.

        • Exactly it’s important to acknowledge the different ways of how racism can show.

          It’s quite possible the person didn’t have a malicious or racist intent at that moment. It’s still racist and people need awareness to tackle that subconscious racism. That’s why talking about it and bringing it to the news is so important.

          Not saying you wanted to stop the discussion, btw. Just wanted to add to it.

    •  Ilflish   ( @Ilflish@lemm.ee ) 
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      19 months ago

      It’s one of those points where a simple question would have solved a huge issue either way. Just people afraid to cause any commotion. I’m not asking to berate or assume the worst, just ask "why did you skip that girl. Even if you are a pansy shit, you don’t have to confront until they are blunt about it.