For a
brief moment, goalscorers forget poverty and war
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[June 11, 2018]
(Reuters) - The eyes of the
world will turn to Russia this week for the World Cup but it is far
away you must look to find the sport's beating heart -- on
war-ravaged streets and in poverty-stricken slums where the simple
act of scoring a goal transcends the grind of everyday life.
For every goal celebrated by the 32-teams at the four-yearly
gathering of soccer's superstars, thousands more will be scored on
makeshift pitches in Yemen, Somalia and Gaza and beyond.
They will not be recorded for posterity and replayed thousands of
times over. But they will not be forgotten and the scorer, for a few
minutes at least, can dream of being a hero.
"My favorite player is (Argentina's Lionel) Messi. When I score a
goal I feel happy and successful, I'm pleased that my team mates are
also happy with me," 14-year-old Mohammed Ali Kargbo said after
scoring a goal in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
In the four years since FIFA's extravaganza was played out across
Brazil, soccer's governing body has been dogged by corruption
scandals provoking accusations from fans that the 'beautiful game'
has been poisoned by greed.
The month-long tournament in Russia is officially costing an
eye-watering 683 billion rubles ($11 billion). Many of the players
are millionaires many times over.
Dreams cost nothing, though. Try telling 12-year-old Aoud Moustafa,
who plays with his friends in Syria's Zaizon refugee camp in Deraa
that soccer has lost its soul.
"When I score I feel very happy and I also feel that I am stronger
and faster than my friends," he said after a game on a dusty patch
of earth.
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Omarbah scores a goal with a deflated ball as boys play football in
the ACI 2000 neighborhood of Bamako, Mali May 12, 2018.
REUTERS/Annie Risemberg
The World Cup will be played in 12 ultra-modern stadiums across
Russia, most newly-built with sums of money that would be truly
life-changing for millions of vulnerable people across Africa and
the Middle East.
Yet access to a ball and a goal, be it a couple of chunks of
masonry, two twisted sticks in the desert or a the remains of a
bombed-out building can provide a 'theater of dreams' -- a refuge
from the horrors of armed conflict or the daily struggle of a life
lived in the most challenging circumstances.
For one young boy playing in the playground of a bomb-damaged school
in Benghazi, Libya, the simple act of scoring a goal represents a
homecoming of sorts -- the chance of a return to some semblance of
normality
"I feel joyful because I am playing in my own area, which I have
been unable to do for more than three years because of the war," he
said.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman. Editing by Patrick Johnston)
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