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RIGHTS: Before the Olympics in Brazil… By Danielle Batist SWANSEA, U.K., Oct 29 (IPS) - Athletes competing for Olympic gold speak to the imagination of most of us.
Homeless people playing an international football tournament may be a less
familiar sight. Brazilians in Rio de Janeiro will get a chance to see both.
Not only will the city host the Olympics in 2016, it will stage the Homeless
World Cup football in September next year.
It was over a beer in sunny Cape Town that Scot Mel Young and Austrian
Harald Schmied came up with the idea of the Homeless World Cup. Both from
a background in street papers, they wanted to create an international
language to enable homeless people to communicate with one another
around the world. They quickly found that one already existed: football.
But of course, street football. Each team has four players out on the court
who can be all male, all female or mixed. There are also four substitute
players per team, who can be changed for a player on the court through the
game. Games last 14 minutes and are fast and fun to watch. Teams play two
matches day throughout the week-long competition.
And so, the first Homeless World Cup was held in Austria in 2003 with 18
nations competing for the trophy. Social entrepreneur Mel Young has since
grown the tournament to bring 56 nations together at the Homeless World
Cup in Melbourne in 2008, including a separate Women's Cup.
An annual, international football tournament, the Homeless World Cup brings
together teams of people who are homeless and socially excluded to take a
once in a lifetime opportunity to represent their country in an international
sports event.
Teams are selected through street newspapers and local street football
projects. Sponsorship comes from local organisations and companies, with
flights, accommodation and gear paid for with support from Nike and the
Vodafone Foundation. Some 500 players participate in the now annual
tournament each year, attracting on average 50,000 spectators to cheer them
on.
Supporters of the Homeless cup include UEFA (Union of European Football
Associations), the UN, the football clubs Manchester United and Real Madrid,
Manchester United legend and Homeless World Cup Ambassador Eric
Cantona, and international footballers Didier Drogba and Rio Ferdinand.
The tournament's goal - to 'kick off poverty' - has had effect on the ground
already. It has triggered grassroots football projects in more than 70 nations,
benefiting more than 100,000 players.
Brazil will be the first South American country to host the Olympics, and also
the first to stage a Homeless World Cup. The annual football tournament for
the homeless and socially excluded, next year in its eighth year, has so far
taken place in Graz, Austria (2003), Gothenburg, Sweden (2004), Edinburgh,
Scotland (2005), Cape Town, South Africa (2006), Copenhagen, Denmark
(2007), Melbourne, Australia (2008) and Milan, Italy (2009). In September
next year, Copacabana beach in Rio will be the official venue for the games
with teams from all five continents.
Mel Young, who is president of the Homeless World Cup, believes Rio is "the
perfect location" to host the tournament next year. "Brazil is the home of
football with many of its star players rising from the streets of Brazil to the
global football stage. With the infrastructure created to host the world's
greatest sporting events and government and businesses committed to using
football for real, lasting social change, we are impressed by the impact the
Homeless World Cup will generate for Rio, Brazil and the rest of the world."
Rio recently hosted the Pan American Games (a multi-sports event held every
year in the year before the summer Olympic Games), Parapan American Rio
2007 (a similar event for athletes with disabilities) and the FIFA Futsal World
Cup in 2008 (indoor football). It will also be one of the venues of the 2014
FIFA World Cup.
However, the Homeless World Cup will provide its own unique trial run for
the city in the build-up to the 2016 Olympics. Julio Filgueira, national
secretary of Brazil's Ministry of Sports, says the tournament has the potential
to show the social impact sport can have on people.
"The Homeless World Cup will be a great opportunity to touch the society
about important aspects related to people living under vulnerability and
social exclusion, besides demonstrating how sports can be a powerful tool in
the process of formation and social inclusion," he told the Cup's organisers
upon winning the bid to host the tournament.
Many of the volunteers involved in the Homeless World Cup come back year
after year. Australian referee Hary Milas first got involved during the 2008
tournament in his home country. He made the long journey to Milan this year,
and is already looking forward to his third Homeless World Cup in Rio.
He thinks that the spirit of the tournament that "a ball can change the world"
will certainly be well received in the Brazilian city. He told IPS: "A city that has
over 20 million people that are just soccer mad - how can the message not
be heard? They play football almost around the clock in Rio, and restaurants
and pubs even close as the waiters and chefs all gather and play a game of
football.
"On Copacabana beach hundreds of people play 'futevolei' – footvolley which
is beach volleyball where you use your feet, chest and head. So, staging three
massive arenas with thousands of seats on the same beach is brilliant. Just try
and imagine the electric atmosphere day and night that football loving
Brazilians are going to bring to this event.
"I know of many Australians who were so touched by the message that Mel
Young brought to the world. The sheer enjoyment they received from
volunteering in Melbourne, and many of them funding their own way to Milan
2009, these people were so touched by the experience they are already
saving up to go to Rio."
With 100 million people homeless around the world, the potential impact of
tournaments like the Homeless World Cup is huge. Annual research
conducted by the Homeless World Cup Foundation shows that participation in
the tournament changes the lives of three-quarters of players for the better.
They move into houses and jobs or education, tackle alcohol or drugs
addictions, and restore family bounds.
Former player from the Welsh Team Terry Fitzpatrick told IPS: "We have all
experienced poor living conditions and difficulties in life. Being selected for
the team has given me back my self-belief. I believe I can achieve things
now. And it has made all of us much fitter and more disciplined."
Bill Shaw, executive director of the Philippines street magazine the Jeepney,
has been involved in the street soccer project in his country, and supported
the Philippine team in Milan this year. He says he is convinced Rio will be an
extraordinary experience for next year's players: "Brazil has a romance with
football. For the Philippine Homeless players who experience that romance, it
will change their lives."
Apart from a chance to play for their country, Shaw believes getting to know
people from around the world is important too. "Last year our team met some
beautiful girls in Milan. I gave our captain a hard time about girlfriends and
he looked at me sincerely and said: 'They are just friends. We are here to
make friends.' Our hope is Copacabana beach will be a beach of friends for
the homeless players from around the world."
Coach of the Scottish Homeless World Cup team David Duke is convinced
next year's location will be the best yet. He told IPS: "I think Rio is great
because Brazil for me is the home of football. I think you would be hard
pushed to find a better venue. The backdrop of Sugar Loaf Mountain and
Christ the Redeemer and the vastly populated Copacabana Beach will ensure
an amazing experience for the players. I think it will be the best World Cup
so far!"
Iain McGill has been involved in the Homeless World Cup since he first saw
the action in his home town Edinburgh, Scotland. He was asked to join the
professional referee team in Cape Town in 2006, and has been to every
tournament since.
He told IPS he is excited about Rio: "It is going to be the biggest, boldest
event yet, and what better place to host it than in the home of football? Brazil
is known for supporting their teams in a noisy boisterous fashion - that
won't change. When they see this tournament and what it stands for it is
going to busy and noisy in the stands for sure.
"The crowds will be right behind the teams as they try to win the trophy, but
the really great stuff goes on off the pitch. In the end it is all about the work
being done with homeless folks from around - to work alongside them and
help them turn their lives around."
(END/2009)
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