Sexism in chess does exist 😢
Many people know that when I qualified for the “Men’s” World Chess Championship, I was NOT allowed to compete because of my gender. But most do not know that it was NOT the first time. Here is another unedited excerpt from my upcoming autobiography:
“If sexism is still common today, just imagine the attitudes that prevailed behind the Iron Curtain. My first real encounter of chess' gender problem came in 1974, when I was just five years old. My parents had entered me in the district qualifier for the Budapest Elementary School Championship, just as they had the year before. Only this time, they signed me up for the boys' section. Their reasoning was pretty straightforward: For me to keep improving, I needed to play against better opponents. And, for whatever reason, the stronger players in that age group happened to be boys. Fortunately for us, the event's organizers didn't seem to mind.
By then, I was already a known quantity in our local chess community. So it came as no great surprise to anyone when I won the tournament, or that I did so without losing a single game. Now, ordinarily, winning that event automatically qualifies a player for the Budapest Elementary School Championship -- that's the tournament's entire purpose.
But the Budapest Chess Federation had other ideas. The organization's president, Mr. Mohacsi, was a strict believer of the game's gender line. And he didn't like that a five-year-old girl had even entered boys' district qualifier, much less that I had swept the field. As far as he was concerned, it didn't matter how convincingly I had earned my spot at the championship. The event was for boys only, and he saw to it that my name was withdrawn from the pairings weeks before the competition took place. Nobody bothered to inform me or my parents of this decision, of course. So we spent the run-up to the event training intensely. It wasn't until we arrived in the playing hall that we learned that I'd been disqualified.”
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