Israeli soccer gets its first trans woman referee

Sapir Berman says she has received support from both her family and league officials, with players and fans starting to address her as a woman, even if they don’t always like her calls

Associated Press|
An Israeli soccer referee has come out as transgender and is living — and enforcing the rules of the game — as a woman.
  • Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter

  • Sapir Berman said Tuesday she has received the support of her family, the local referees' union and Israeli and international soccer officials.
    3 View gallery
    ספיר ברמן
    ספיר ברמן
    Sapir Berman
    (Photo: Oz Moalem)
    She said even players and fans have begun to address her as a woman, even if they don't always like her calls on the field.
    “I always saw myself as a woman, from a young age,” Berman, whose birth name was “Sagi,” told reporters.
    “I realized society will not accept me, will not be on my side, so I continued like this for nearly 26 years," she said.
    Six months ago, "I decided to come out and to show who I am, first of all to myself, for my soul,” she said with a smile.
    3 View gallery
    ספיר ברמן
    ספיר ברמן
    Sapir Berman with officials from the Israel Football Association
    (Photo: Oz Moalem)
    Berman began living as a woman visually about three months ago. Her decision comes at a time when gay and transgender people are achieving higher profiles and acceptance in some parts of the world.
    She is not the world’s first transgender soccer referee. In 2018, a British referee named Nick Clark reportedly came out as Lucy Clark, hoping to become a “game-changer.”
    Israel has a reputation for having tolerant attitudes toward gay people with Tel Aviv playing host to one of the world's largest pride parades each year.
    3 View gallery
    שגיא ברמן
    שגיא ברמן
    Sapir Berman refereeing a recent game
    (Photo: Oren Aharoni)
    But some of Israel's soccer powerhouses are located in communities where attitudes are more conservative.
    Berman has been a referee in Israeli soccer for a decade and is now a judge in the country's most elite division, the Israeli Premier League.
    Berman said there are already players who address her as a woman, and at a recent youth match an angry parent used Hebrew's feminine gender when complaining about a call.
    “It shows me there's change in society,” she said.
    Comments
    The commenter agrees to the privacy policy of Ynet News and agrees not to submit comments that violate the terms of use, including incitement, libel and expressions that exceed the accepted norms of freedom of speech.
    ""