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Hindustan Times
3 days ago
- Politics
- Hindustan Times
Chess player Sara Khadem on making the tough moves in life
Stavanger, Norway: In early 2020, after her passport was confiscated resulting in a temporary travel ban from Iran, Sara Khadem didn't know what to do with her life. The Covid pandemic extended the frustration, and forced Sara to even ask her husband, an Iranian movie director who worked at an advertising company then, for a job in his office. Chess was the farthest from her mind for the International Master. 'I stopped looking at chess,' Sara said. 'I was thinking of what else I can do.' Five years on, she is among the six women featuring in a strong field in the ongoing 2025 Norway Chess Women. This invitation has helped rekindle her motivation, which had gone missing during a period of upheaval and uncertainty. The trickling test of a six-month travel ban and the pandemic grew into a storm when, in 2022 at the World Rapid and Blitz Championships in Kazakhstan, Sara refused to wear a hijab. Amid protests in Iran against the mandate for women and heightened tension, Sara, with her husband and one-year-old son, moved to Spain on a residence visa. Now representing that country, she has not returned to Iran since, where an arrest warrant awaits her. 'When you cannot even travel because your own government bans you and they tell you it doesn't matter, like your whole career doesn't matter because we are thinking of something else, then you will reach a point where you don't want to stay,' Sara told a group of journalists here. Sara acknowledged she received support in Iran during her chess journey, and still does from the public. Her thought of emigrating wasn't correlated to what happened in Kazakhstan (it was 'because of my son and the situation in the country'), but not returning to Iran was. 'My first option was to still play for Iran and live outside. Then I realised this wasn't practical because I cannot play in any of the tournaments like the Olympiad and World Cup. I just came to the point where I realised it's not my fault,' she said. Sara isn't the first chess player from Iran to take this route. GM Alireza Firouzja also left Iran protesting the country's boycott of Israel players. He now represents France. 'He had some political issues too, and it's going to be the same (going forward),' Sara said. 'For girls, especially, it's more difficult. If I had to stay in the national team, I had to wear the scarf in order to be able to go back. When I knew this (switching to Spain) was an option for me to decide what I want to do, Iran didn't make sense to me. But still, changing the federation was very difficult. Because I like to play for Iran. I like my country. It wasn't about the country.' Abandoning that country, her family and setting up a life outside – Sara now resides in Marbella – did take its toll. Chess, after her pre-pandemic years of collecting the Grandmaster norms, took a backseat. It even went, as she put it, 'backwards'. 'It was very hard. That's why you don't see me playing so much,' she said. And she is okay with that, in a sport where every day is a race of the ratings. 'I don't want to miss the first years with my son,' Sara said. 'I know a lot of players care about their careers a lot. But I want to make a balance.'


Indian Express
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Indian Express
Why defeats and arrest warrant for not wearing hijab won't prevent Sara Khadem from smiling
For a chess player in the middle of a tournament, Sara Khadem smiles a lot. Plenty of players will tell you how much joy they get out of playing the sport of 64 squares. But come tournament time, most players enter a zone of brooding grimness which they refuse to exit even when they're not actually playing on the board. Meals are had in hotel rooms. Interview requests are politely rebuffed. Even eye contact with the world is reduced. Sara, on the other hand, comes across as a breath of fresh air, laughing at jokes with her friends during meals, happy to chat away after games. 'I have been happy even in my worst tournaments,' laughs Sara when asked how she manages to be at ease even in the middle of a tournament as prestigious as Norway Chess — which by her own admission, is the 'strongest women's tournament she has participated in'. 'I might smile, but I might be upset about the game also. But in general, I feel like my life isn't dependent on these games because I'm a happy person in general. If I win this tournament, and if you tell me my life would change, I'd say, 'No, no, it won't.' '(Winning or losing) is not the end of the world. I have had good tournaments. I have had bad ones. It all passes,' says the 28-year-old who understands fully well that life holds the capacity to inflict much harsher cuts than your king getting checkmated. Just days after this conversation, Sara, whose full name is Sarasadat Khademalsharieh, took down Lei Tingjie in round 4 at Norway Chess with black pieces. Sara, who is the only international master competing in the Norway Chess tournament, has seen her life upended a few times over the past decade. The Iran-born player made global headlines in December 2022 when she opted not to wear a hijab during the FIDE World Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships. It was a stand she took partly to protest the custodial death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, after she was arrested by the morality police in Tehran. Amini's death led to unprecedented street protests in Iran. Sara's decision to play without the headscarf angered the powers that be and it led to her exile from the country she loved because there was an arrest warrant issued by Iranian authorities against her in January 2023. It was the final nail. Her husband, Ardeshir Ahmadi, who is a filmmaker, TV host and businessman, had spent three months in an Iranian prison in 2015. Sara had also reportedly had her passport confiscated by Iranian authorities for a few months in the past. 'In my chess career I had reached a point that maybe I wasn't sure what I wanted to do,' she admits. 'I was a very motivated player, but at some point I had a travel ban from the Iranian government so I couldn't travel for six months. That was at a point when I was collecting my GM norms, where I was at my peak rating. Then COVID happened, after that I had my baby and we immigrated. These were a lot of changes in my life that made me go very slowly, even backwards! I wasn't sure if I wanted to continue this. But I think tournaments like these give me motivation.' In another country, Sara would have been toasted for her success on the board. She had won the under-12 World Youth Chess Championship just four years after moving her first chess piece. She was also the under-16 World Blitz Chess Champion in 2013, and the under-20 runner-up in classical chess in 2014 when she was 17. 'I was getting support from the people but when you cannot even travel because your own government bans you and they tell you your whole career doesn't matter because we are thinking of something else, then you will reach a point where you don't want to stay,' she says. 'I wouldn't say Iranian chess players were not getting support. Chess is better there than many other countries. Changing the federation was very difficult, because I like to play for Iran, I liked my country, it wasn't about the country.' In one of those moments of frustration, Sara says he told her husband that she will come work with him. 'He was like, 'but what will you do?' I was going to his office, because I couldn't stay home. I had stopped looking at chess. I was thinking, what else can I do with my life? And then COVID happened. But still, taking away your passport is something no one would want,' she adds. Sara is now piecing together her chess career once more after transferring her chess federation from Iran to Spain in July 2023. She laughs as she informs that she has a young boy at home, called Sam, who is angry at her at the moment because she is away playing chess. She says her quest now is to find a balance between chess and her family. 'This is the first long tournament that I'm playing after a long time. I don't want to miss the first years with my son. I know a lot of players care about their careers a lot, but I want to make a balance,' she says with a smile. Amit Kamath is Assistant Editor at The Indian Express and is based in Mumbai. ... Read More