Former Australian tennis champion Jelena Dokic has shared a haunting set of pictures revealing the aftermath of the abuse she suffered all through her profession.
The 39-year-old former world No. 4 has grow to be one of many stars of the Australian summer season of tennis along with her sharp and insightful commentary.
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But Dokic has additionally been open along with her struggles with despair, on-line abuse, physique shaming and the household violence she suffered all through her profession.
Dokic revealed the horrific abuse she suffered by the hands of her father throughout her tennis profession in her e-book Unbreakable.
She revealed she suffered common beatings with a belt or a hard-capped boot, together with one incident which noticed her knocked unconscious.
On Thursday, Dokic took to Instagram, sharing pictures of herself at 17 along with her legs coated in bruises.
Dokic revealed she was “sad and angry” after talking at a home and household violence occasion with the numerous variety of ladies nonetheless struggling abuse.
“Swollen, bruised and bleeding shins from being beaten and kicked all night with sharp shoes right into my shins for losing a match,” she posted on Instagram.
“These images were taken more than two weeks later and I was still heavily bruised. I was 17 years old.
“To this day I still have sensitive and bumpy shins from this beating.
“From every wound there is a scar and these are mine. I have survived but not everyone woman and girl has or will.
“And that’s the sad reality.”
Dokic stated the explanation for the publish was that there have been numerous people who find themselves at the moment struggling however that don’t have a voice.
“I was speaking at a domestic and family violence event today and I was sad,” she continued.
“Sad and angry for the tens of millions of women out there in the world who I know right in this moment are going through a lot worse than I ever did.
“1 woman a week is killed from domestic violence in Australia alone.
“1 in 4 women will experience domestic violence in their lifetime.
“The figures are even worse around the world.
“The more that we don’t talk about it, the more we shy away from the issue, the more we are abandoning women and girls.
“For those reading this that might be experiencing abuse or domestic violence just know I get you.
“I know how scared and afraid you are.
“Know that you have incredible strength and courage.
“Nothing is your fault.
“For those that can please be there for those that need help and support. Don’t shy away from them and don’t abandon them.
“Coming from someone that has been there, abandoned and scared to death please don’t turn your back. Women and girls need you and your help.
“SPEAKING UP ABOUT DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IS NOT ATTENTION SEEKING.
“WOMEN AND GIRLS DIE EVERY DAY BECAUSE OF THIS JUDGEMENT AND SHAME.
“AND WHEN IT HAPPENS IT’S UNFORTUNATELY TOO LATE.
“WE LIVE IN A SOCIETY THAT SHAMES AND STIGMATISES TALKING ABOUT ABUSE AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE BUT THEN WE MOURN THE KILLINGS DUE TO VIOLENCE.
“Let’s do more for the future generations. For our daughters, sisters and all the girls and women around the world to make this a better and safer place for them to be happy, healthy and free of violence.
“I will never stop fighting and speaking up about this issue especially for those that can’t and don’t have a voice.
“If you need help contact the 24 hour line on 1800 737 732.”
Dokic has been an outspoken advocate after struggling home violence by the hands of her father Damir.
In her e-book Unbreakable, Dokic wrote: “A mediocre training session, a loss, a bad mood — any of these trigger him to bring out the belt. My losing particularly sends my father into a rage. I rarely lose but when I do the consequence is brutal.
“Then he tells me to take off my shirt. It hurts a lot less when you have your shirt on and that’s why he makes me take it off. I stand in my bra, my back to him, and he orders me not to move as he hits me. Often he almost slices my skin with the belt.”
She additionally stated in a 2017 interview with The Project the fixed abuse grew to become “normal”.
“You get to a stage after that happening for a couple of years where it’s just your everyday life and you accept it as being, let’s say normal,” Dokic stated.
“That’s what my life was about, that’s what I had to deal with literally on a day-to-day basis.
“There was always something even if it at times wasn’t physical, which was very rare, it was emotional. There was always something that I didn’t do right.”
Source: www.news.com.au