What We Know About The 2022 Street Child World Cup In Qatar

A sign at the entrance of the Street Child World Cup in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in April 2014 [Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP]

Probably not many people around the world knows about The Street Child World Cup but it sure is making a dire impact on the lives of many across the globe.

Just over a month before the FIFA World Cup 2022 kicks off, host nation Qatar  Doha will play host to the Street Child World Cup (SCWC).

The 11-day event, which includes 27 teams from 24 countries, will take place from October 5 at Education City Stadium, one of the eight venues for the Qatar 2022 World Cup that kicks off on November 20.

This year’s tournament will be the fourth SCWC after South Africa (2010), Brazil (2014) and Russia (2018).

According to a co-founder and CEO of Street Child United (SCU) the essence of the game was to “bring a change on the street children’s behalf.”

This year’s tournament will be the fourth SCWC after South Africa (2010), Brazil (2014) and Russia (2018) [Sergio Moraes/Reuters]
This year’s tournament will be the fourth SCWC after South Africa (2010), Brazil (2014) and Russia (2018) [Sergio Moraes/Reuters]
“In 2008, I met a boy named Andy who lived on the streets,”

“He said when people see him on the streets, they say he’s a street child but when they see him playing football, they say he’s a person. We wanted to bring a change on the street children’s behalf and we realised that having a world cup for street children was a great way to do that.”

“The last 12 years have been a bit of a fairytale. We went from eight teams to 24 and all the projects we’re working with [in various countries] are much stronger and been able to bring the messages that are important for SCU, particularly around birth registration, access to education, protection from violence and gender equality.”

For Sadock John, being able to play football and taking part in the SCWC in 2010 was the turning point in his life.

See also  Complete Championship Fixtures For Saturday, April 9, 2022

Growing up on the streets and being part of various gangs breaking into houses, John said his future looked bleak and he never imagined one day being able to represent his country on the international stage.

“Football made me realise that life was more than what it was then. I’m not ashamed of sharing my story, of how I ended up on the streets and then how I got up from there,” John told Al Jazeera.

“Being a street child is not the end of the journey. You can make it out if you focus on what you want. For me, that was football then.

“When I returned [from the world cup], life started changing. I wasn’t called a street child anymore but a role model. Other parents wanted me to be close to their kids, they wanted me to talk to them about my experiences.”

Drika, who grew up in northern Brazil before moving to a community in Rio, terms football and her experience at SCWC 2014 “life-changing”.

“Football, for me, has been life-changing. Before being part of the world cup, I thought I’d be like an ordinary girl in the community — having a child when I was 15, getting married and staying at home, which is not bad,”

“But at and after the world cup, I met people from different places and that opened my mind and I thought that if I got there, I could do even more. The world was so big why would I stay just in the community.

“I never expected I would be representing my country at a world cup because I came from a small village. It was like a dream come true.”

See also  NPFL Results On Saturday, Sunday And Current Table

Drika, who took part in the 2014 World Cup, now works as a personal trainer in her community [Faras Ghani/Al Jazeera]
According to the SCU, 10 teams will be participating at the SCWC for the first time, including three refugee teams – Darfur, Hungary and Zaatari – as well as a girls team from Palestine.

“The long-term journey is to end children living on the streets, anywhere in the world,” Wroe said.

“It won’t happen overnight but we’ve seen significant change on the issues that are important for those young people. I’m a passionate believer that these young people have the same ambitions and potential as any other young person. They just haven’t had the opportunities. If we can play a part in helping them believe they can achieve anything, they can.”

Disclaimer

Comments expressed here do not reflect the opinions of Vantage News Nigeria or any employee thereof.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.