Surfer Bethany Hamilton Vows to Boycott World Surf League Events Over Transgender Policies

Surfer Bethany Hamilton Vows to Boycott World Surf League Events Over Transgender Policies
US surfer Bethany Hamilton competes in the Outerknown Fiji Women's Pro surfing competition in Tavarua, Fiji on May 31, 2017. (Tom Servais/AFP via Getty Images)
Brad Jones
Updated:

Surfer Bethany Hamilton says she will boycott professional surfing events that allow male-to-female transgender athletes to compete.

Hamilton, who lost an arm to a shark attack in 2003 and whose comeback story inspired the movie “Soul Surfer,” said recently that she won’t compete if the World Surf League persists with its new policy that lets transgender surfers who have low testosterone levels to compete in women’s divisions.

The league, based in Santa Monica, California, oversees world tour events for the world’s top professional surfers.

Hamilton told more than 2 million fans in videos posted on Instagram that she’s skeptical of the new guidelines and suggested that professional surfers currently competing in the world tour should have been consulted before the new policy was implemented.

“Many of the girls currently on tour are not in support [of] this new rule, and they fear being ostracized if they speak up,” she said. “I strive to have love for all of mankind, regardless of any differences, but this concerns me as a professional athlete that has been competing in World Surf League events for the past 15-plus years.”

Surfer Bethany Hamilton accepts the Favorite Comeback Athlete Award onstage during the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Sports Awards 2014 at the University of California–Los Angeles Pauley Pavilion on July 17, 2014. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Surfer Bethany Hamilton accepts the Favorite Comeback Athlete Award onstage during the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Sports Awards 2014 at the University of California–Los Angeles Pauley Pavilion on July 17, 2014. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Although she isn’t surfing in the world tour, Hamilton draws large crowds when she does compete.

The World Surf League stated on Feb. 6, that its policy reflects the new standards of the International Surfing Association, which sets qualification rules for the Olympics.

The international association changed its standards in October 2022, allowing male-born athletes who identify as female to compete with women if they have maintained a certain level of testosterone for the previous 12 months.

Both organizations have stated that they'll continue to evaluate their policies as more research, information, and feedback emerge.

Because other women’s sports have seen “glimpses of male-bodied dominance,” Hamilton suggested on social media that the “best solution” would be to create a separate division for transgender athletes “so all can have an opportunity to showcase passion and talent.”

She said she’s received “mean and cruel” pushback for her stance and urged all to have civil conversation and debate about the issue of transgender athletes in women’s sports.

“If there’s one thing I’ve learned over the last few years, it’s that I don’t, and I won’t, live in anger at the world and the people I share it with,” she said. “I won’t hate because I don’t see things the way others may. And, I will continually aim to have grace, forgiveness and love and honesty, no matter how cruel and harsh the world may be.”