Football a refuge for children who seek asylum in Australia
SYDNEY: With a whistle hanging from her neck as she shouts instructions in perfect English, teenager Athmar Habeb looks very much at home refereeing a football match in Sydney.
Yet it was only four years ago that Habeb had to flee her wartorn Iraqi homeland, arriving in Australia aged 12 with her family and knowing only three English words -- salt, apple and eggs.
Her love of the beautiful game led her to Football United, a programme helping refugees integrate in Australia, and her life changed.
“Football United made me very confident with my English and I just started opening my heart to everyone,” Habeb, 16, told AFP on the sidelines of a “gala day” in Sydney that brought together teams for a friendly contest.
“I met a lot of friends in Football United ... now most of them are my best friends. I love communicating with people, especially young people like me.”
Refugees feature prominently in Australia’s football history.
The former chairman of governing body Football Federation Australia, billionaire businessman Frank Lowy, was a Jewish refugee from Eastern Europe who arrived with one suitcase and no English in the early 1950s.
The late veteran broadcaster Les Murray, whose voice became synonymous with football in Australia, was born Laszlo Urge in Hungary in 1945 and arrived Down Under a decade later.
In recent years, programmes like Football United have helped displaced youth, including Iraqi Sarah Glaoo, 17, and 19-year-old Syrian Suliman Alkhateeb.
Both arrived in Sydney last year as Australia opened up 12,000 additional refugee places for people fleeing conflicts in Syria and Iraq.
It was Australian football’s strong bonds with refugees that caught the attention of the programme’s American founder Anne Bunde-Birouste.
Bunde-Birouste was living in Paris in 1998 when she was swept up by the euphoria surrounding the black-Arab-white make-up of the World Cup-winning French national team.
“The French won against all odds and because the team was multicultural. So it brought the whole country together,” BundeBirouste told AFP.
“Knowing that it was the world game, I just wanted to try and see what we could do in Australia to help refugee kids.”
Years later, the university lecturer set up the first Football United clinics in Australia, and thousands of youths have since passed through them.
A key attraction is the low cost, said Natasha Hill, the programme’s communication coordinator.
Organised sport is expensive in Australia and with some of the refugees coming from large families, enrolling each child in a local club is costly.
As such, Football United provides an easy entry point for young arrivals keen to make new friends.
They then get to develop their football abilities while also learning about Australian culture and life skills such as goal-setting and time management.
“Most of them have come from... broken families back in their home countries,” Hill told AFP.
“Given that Australia is a multicultural country, when they come here, it is something new to them. Back home, it was all one race. Providing our programme to them helps them integrate with other cultures.”
At the recent “gala day”, the youths were treated to an inspiring talk by Honey Thaljieh, a corporate communications manager for world governing body FIFA, who grew up in Palestine.