Mobbed by a singing, dancing and horn-blowing crowd of supporters at Johannesburg’s airport, South African runner Caster Semenya looked overwhelmed and a little terrified.
The gold-medal-winning teenager at the center of an international controversy about her gender cried “Mama! Mama!” and reached out for her mother as police tried to clear a path through the throngs at the welcoming ceremony in the arrival area.
South Africans rallied around their 800-meter world champion as she returned home Tuesday from Berlin, and even President Jacob Zuma vowed that he would not permit her gold medal to be taken away, no matter what gender tests say.
The International Amateur Athletic Federation has initiated the tests on Semenya, who stunned the world championships last week with her decisive win but whose muscular build and deep voice sparked questions about whether she is a woman.
There was no doubt among the thousands of supporters who greeted the 18-year-old at the airport with posters reading: “Caster You Go Girl!,” “Our First Lady of Sport,” and “Caster You Beaut.”
The crowd cheered wildly as she tentatively made her way onto a small stage in a parking lot, but slowly she relaxed, gave a thumbs-up and, breaking into a broad grin, said, “Hi, everybody!”
Clad in the team’s yellow-and-green team tracksuit with her gold medal dangling from her neck, Semenya even tried a few dance moves.
“She has lifted our hearts,” said Semenya’s mother, Dorcus, wearing a traditional headdress. “We feel powerful because of her.”
South Africans rally for runner in gender debate
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