Willy De Bruyn: Pedaling Through the Belgian Cycling Legacy

Image Courtesy: Google Doodle

Willy De Bruyn (4 August 1914 – 13 August 1989) was a Belgian cyclist, who became unofficial women’s world champion in 1934.

Life and Career

De Bruyn was born on 4 August 1914 ย in Erembodegem, East Flanders, Belgium with both male and female sex organs. Gender norms were even stricter during this time, and De Bruynโ€™s parents had to register him as either a boy or a girl. He was assigned a female at birth and named Elvira, but in his teenage years, he started to question the gender identity that was assigned to him.

He grew up in his parents’ cafe, where he worked for a while after completing school. During that time, he picked up cycling and won his first race at 15 years old. At this time, in the eyes of society and legally he was considered a woman and, therefore,ย  became the female world champion cyclist in 1934 and 1936. But after a few years, he stopped competing with women as he felt uncomfortable in this competition set and the victories he earned.

De Bruyn moved to Brussels and worked as a dishwasher, sawmiller, and baker โ€” jobs that were exclusive to men โ€” but was fired once people discovered his ID said โ€œfemale.โ€ At this point, he had been researching and considering his gender identity and intersex traits for years. He decided to officially have his gender recognized as male and brought a doctorโ€™s certificate confirming he was a man to the court of Oudenaarde. The court initially denied the request, but a year later after much persistence with lawyers and additional doctorโ€™s notes, De Bruyn received his identity card declaring him a man named Willy.

Cycling still brought him joy, so De Bruyn began racing with men. In 1938, he married fellow cyclist Clementine Juchters, and together they opened and ran a sports bar in Brussels calledย Cafรฉ Denderleeuw for many years before settling in Antwerp. He died on 13 August 1989 in Antwerp.

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Award and Legacy

Today, De Bruyn is remembered for his athleticism, his perseverance on the journey to becoming legally recognized as a man, and his fight for the acceptance of intersex people. In 2019, a street in Brussels was named after the cycling champion, the first road in the city to be named after an intersex person. On 4 August 2023, Google celebrated Willy De Bruyn’s 109th Birthday with a doodle.


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