Caster Semenya. All she wanted to do was run in the Olympics. And she was fast enough to do it, so what went wrong. What went wrong was that she WAS fast. And she didn't LOOK quite right to somebody. And that's when the intrusion began.
Semenya had her gender put into question. And instead of going the conventional route of checking her birth certificate, or talking to her pediatrician, they put science to work. And they didn't simply look for a Y chromosome, they went in-depth. So now this young woman had to face their discovery before the entire world. She's intersexed, a hermaphrodite. She's left to feel alone in a world that has two accepted genders; male and female.
At health.allrefer.com they even have a "treatment" plan outlined.
"The family of the infant needs to be informed of the child's condition as early as possible. It is a very sensitive time, requiring compassion and guidance to avoid feelings of guilt, shame, or discomfort."
Guilt? Shame? Discomfort? For what? One in every 1500 births annually are diagnosed as intersex, and those are just the ones that are caught. If there are no external signs, they aren't recognized until puberty or later. And those numbers are unknown. So it's nothing to be ashamed of, and obviously nothing to feel guilty for.
Allrefer also says, "Early assignment of the sex is important for the emotional well being of the person. In large part, the decision is based on the corrective potential of the ambiguous genitalia, rather than on chromosomal determinants. The initial care should include a team of professionals that include neonatologists and pediatric specialists, endocrinologists, radiologists, urologists, psychologists, and geneticists."
What they fail to recognize is the actual child. How in so many cases the child is brought up not being told about how they were born, how many children "feel" like they are the wrong gender, or how confusing puberty can be for them. Puberty is hard enough for male and female children, it is much worse on an intersexed child that was "assigned" the wrong gender.
Rumor has it that Semenya will get to keep her medal, but will be banned from women's races from here on out. Why? Because her hormones and internal organs don't "match"? What about men's races? She can't use the same locker room, her external organs don't match. Where does that leave this young runner? What has she done wrong to be penalized like this?
Scientifically, we know, we can prove beyond a shadow of a doubt, a person's gender. The problem lies in our stunted social development that prevents us from recognizing the third gender. Instead, they are EXPECTED to have surgery to correct the matter, the sooner the better. Generally, the same people that insist that the intersexed have this "corrective" surgery, are the same ones that begrudge an undiagnosed, of any gender, the same type of surgery.
If we are going to rely on scientific testing to determine an athlete's gender, then we need to start accepting the idea that gender is not clear cut. It is more than genitalia, reproductive organs, and hormone levels. We have to realize that not only are there more than two genders, but that most likely these are only the extremes. We also need to realize that what we currently called intersexed may only be a blanket term to cover the genders we aren't scientifically, socially, or intellectually prepared to accept.
I hope that Caster Semenya's name goes down in history not as the athlete that was "outed" for being deformed, but as the world's first step to changing their perception of gender. The reason we realize there are more than two genders. And as a very fast runner.