The Arab world’s first female pro wrestler talks to Kate Dobinson about fighting men in a conservative country and how her mum sews 'modest' crop tops
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Wrestling is all about nerve. Stage
presence, trash talk and storytelling almost trump athleticism in this
heavily scripted theatre. Teenager Joelle Hunter, a pseudonym for Gheeda
Chamasaddine, already cultivates a strong image as the Arab world’s
first female pro wrestler.
She’s
the classic underdog; a 5ft 4in woman - who, despite her diminutive
stature, choke-slams men triple her size - not to mention she's a Muslim
from Saudi Arabia sporting crop tops and fishnets.
But there’s more to Joelle than shock value or teen rebellion. Eyes
framed by winged liner hold an unflinching gaze as she swivels, bare
legs swinging, in a cream office chair backstage at HM Fitness, home to
Dubai’s only Pro Wrestling Academy.
The sound of thwacks and grunts reverberate from the gym next door,
peppered with cheers from an adjacent bowling alley. Tiny, and swamped
by an oversized black Nike training jacket concealing cotton hot pants,
Joelle finishes tucking into a plastic lunchbox of white rice before her
second of three weekly training sessions.
The 17-year-old or ‘Bloody Bunny’ as she is known to her Twitter
followers, sporting tongue ring and labret piercing just beneath the
lip, with glossy ringlets tucked firmly behind a black plug in her ear,
hopes to be the face of a new generation of fiercely independent Muslim
girls growing up in an increasingly cosmopolitan United Arab Emirates
(UAE).
Expatriates make up 84 per cent of the diverse population and yet, the UAE is built on an undeniably conservative, Islamic bedrock. Hence why when a woman throws Arab men around the ring, it is considered ‘a little outrageous’. She agrees: "We have our traditions and our culture and this [my sport] is a little bit odd to be honest, because this girl walks out and beats guys up, and the Arab culture is that the man is always the masculine figure and you have to listen to what the guy says.
"There’s so many people that were like 'you’re too pretty to wrestle and what are people going to think of you later on?' But I don’t care what people think of me, this is for me and if I don’t do it now then it’s never going to happen in the Middle East. You shouldn’t let anyone be a burden in your life, not even your parents."
Dress codes
Although her single mother Nihaya Haimour initially expected Joelle to grow into a ‘girlie girl’, she now watches World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) shows with her only daughter and sews her costumes – albeit as ‘plain’ as possible and a world away from the hypersexualised WWE ‘Divas’ such as Michelle McCool - shown on the Middle East’s recently launched 24 hour programming schedule."My ring attire is very basic. I don’t have anything fancy because I respect the law here," says Hunter. "In America you’ve got girls with everything out and to me that’s not what I’m trying to portray. I want to create something different. That’s why my attire is very plain. It shouts out, 'hey look at me and not my body'.
"Actually, my mum made my outfits for me – except for the fact that I bought shorts. Honestly, I had so many old clothes in my wardrobe that I don’t even wear anymore so I made most of them into my crop tops. It’s hard to move in the ring with a lot of glitter and sparkles so you gotta wear something that helps you avoid wardrobe malfunctions."
Ah yes, the fights. Hunter's feud with ‘The Vigilante’, 19-year-old Michel Nassif from Lebanon, is ramped up for the gym’s low budget fight nights "and I want to take her down," says Michel, aware of the story he’s promoting.
You’re basically torturing them slowly until they’re like 'okay, okay stop'.
The setup is undeniably amateur, but as Hunter jumps between the ropes and roars “COME ON” before performing a sequence of strikes, strength-based holds and throws and acrobatic jumps, she is utterly convincing when pinning her hairier, weightier opponent to the floor.
The fighting style is submissive, she says. "Kind of similar to Mixed Martial Arts but you choke them or put them in submission so their arm is crunched all the way to the back as if it’s about to break. So you’re basically torturing them slowly until they’re like 'okay, okay stop,'" she says, laughing.
"You’ve [also] got the powerhouse, where you lift and throw people around so you typically get very big guys like 200lbs. You rarely find girls that are powerhouses, but there was Chyna [two-time WWF Intercontinental Champion] but she was huge.
"You’ve got high fliers, who basically drop off the ropes, and then you’ve got technical for people mainly in the ring. Lastly there’s dirty where you claw people in the eyes and give them low blows, that’s for bad guys."
One of the guys
Thirty-one-year-old Caleb Hall is Hunter’s world class coach, hailing from Kentucky and trained by WWE legend Rip Rogers. He says the 20-strong male squad didn’t bat an eyelid when Hunter walked into the gym 11 months ago."The other guys are happy to train with her and just treat her like one of the guys and most of them don’t go easy on her. A few of them hold back and I say 'hey treat her just the same' and they do," he says.
It was a bit awkward at first, admits Hunter: "I didn’t know anyone and I thought, like when I walked in there would be other girls in there, they’re gonna be mean. But everyone was surprisingly very supportive – there were no girls it was all guys."
You can be anything you want, no matter what your gender is.
"I have bigger responsibilities right now, in creating a female fighting division. Because if I leave Dubai behind without a girl’s division then that’s unfair; that’s me being ungrateful. I feel like it’s my duty to create the female wrestling division here."
As I walk outside onto Meydan Road the world’s tallest skyscraper the Burj Khalifa punctures the cloudless sky - a beautiful symbol of Hunter's audacity:
"You can be anything you want, no matter what your gender is," she says to me as I leave. "Nothing’s impossible."