The Right to Play - Lebanon



Community

Mar 15th 2021
2 MIN READING

The right to play knows no genders: Inter Campus girls on pitches around the world


Beirut - Sila, Rama, Yasmin, Hannadi are girls from the Shatila Inter Campus group which involves 80 girls and boys from the Lebanese refugee camp. They first met on the football pitch two years ago and have been inseparable ever since. “Inter Campus made us discover our passion for football. So, we often wear our Inter shirts, even off the pitch, running through the narrow streets, and when the World Cup was on we didn't miss a single match. We obviously cheered on all the Inter players!".

The sadly famous refugee camp of Shatila, was, in the early 80s, already the scene of one of the bloodiest pages of the political-religious clashes in those territories, it is a place that does not offer many opportunities to its approximately 35 thousand inhabitants and in which women's sport specifically has no outlets. It is for this reason that parents, especially the mothers of our little Intercampisti, welcomed the project with great enthusiasm, supporting it and allowing their girls and boys to all play together on the same pitch, demonstrating a cultural openness that is not common in a society of the Middle East. However, we are learning to understand that every decision is the result of a complex intertwining of situations that should not and cannot be superficially and easily catalogued by the West.

"Unfortunately, there have been some cases where parents did not allow their daughters to come and play on the pitch and practice a sport like football", the project coordinator Othman Afifi tells us - "The road is still long, but we are satisfied with the feedback we’ve gotten so far. The mothers even want to play football themselves, and we hope we’ll be able to accomodate them soon!"

The commitment and determination of the local coaches - all born and raised in the refugee camp - is essential to offer girls and boys the opportunity to play together, to confront each other, to share a common activity, overcoming clear separations that often involve daughters and girls in traditional dances that isolate them from their male peers.

In a context in which many civil rights are lacking due to the complex socio-political situation in which the inhabitants of Shatila are forced to live, the Inter Campus project, thanks also to the collaboration with the NGO Anera, takes on even greater value, by promoting gender equity and also setting the prevention of social deviation and support for education as its main objectives.


Italian version
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