Saturday Star

Cheers sweep conflicts aside

Robotics a reason for hope

- MORIAH BALINGIT SHARIF HASSAN

AS SIX robots battled it out on the floor of the DAR Constituti­on Hall’s auditorium during the FIRST Global Challenge competitio­n on Tuesday afternoon, a cheer rose.

“Team Hope! Team Hope! Team Hope!”

The cheering came from a corner of the stadium where a group of boys from Team Lebanon, wearing rainbow clown wigs, stood next to Team Palestine. They, and teams from Libya and Jordan, were lending their voices to support a group of Syrian refugees known as Team Hope.

It was one of many times when teens would spontaneou­sly break into cheers for competitor­s.

When they weren’t cheering, hundreds of teens from 157 countries mingled, chatted and leaned in for selfies in the sweltering corridors of the concert hall.

In-between making final adjustment­s on their robots, a bonding experience that has become central to this competitio­n, they signed each other’s T-shirts and exchanged pins.

If they did not speak the same language, they all understood the thrill, the frustratio­n and the anxiety that comes with competitio­n.

These are precisely the kinds of friendship­s FIRST Global founder Dean Kamen, an inventor, hoped to build – ones that crossed languages, cultures and geopolitic­al frontiers.

His lofty vision is one in which graduates of this pro- gramme put aside politics to solve the world’s most pressing challenges, like shortages of clean water and the myriad problems wrought by global climate change.

In this year’s competitio­n, teams built robots to sort contaminat­ed water from clean water – actually orange and blue plastic balls – to get them thinking about the real-life challenge many face getting clean water.

“If we can get kids from around the world to deal with the same issues, we could compete on the same team,” Kamen said at the opening ceremony. “You don’t have to have self-inflicted wounds created by arbitrary difference­s and politics.”

This cauldron of competitio­n – with countries sending some of their brightest and best aspiring engineers – forged plenty of unusual friendship­s.

Team Armenia and Team Turkey, who come from countries whose relations are strained – were allied in one match. The Armenian team also helped Lesotho make modificati­ons to their robot.

“You have to put politics aside,” said Lilit Tarumyan, a 16-year-old team member. Her teammate, Maria Ter-Minasyan, chimed in: “They were some cool guys!”

The contest is called a “coopera-tition,” with points given to teams for working together to form alliances.

Under their country’s flag, three young Iranian men tinkered with their robot on Tuesday, in preparatio­n for the final, nerve-racking matches of the FIRST Global Robotics competitio­n. Just feet away, Team Israel were busily making adjustment­s to theirs.

The two countries have hostile relations, but in this corner of the DAR Constituti­on Hall, separated by no more than 10m, the teens from both countries forged an unlikely bond.

They chatted about robots and politics, and huddled together for a group photo with founder Kamen. Then the teens wished each other good luck.

“Please, see us today, we Israelis and Iranians were together and happy,” said Mohammad Reza Karami, the mentor for Team Iran. “You also can see, learn and be together.”

The competitio­n capped weeks of drama in which two teams – one from The Gambia and Afghanista­n’s all- girls squad – appeared to be in jeopardy of not competing in the US when their visas were initially denied. Their plight won inter national attention and sympathy.

The Gambian team finally received their visas in early July. But the Afghan girls did not get their visas until President Donald Trump intervened at the last minute, granting them passage to the US.

Alieu Bah, an 18-year-old Gambian team member from Serakunda, said the team was crestfalle­n when their visa applicatio­ns were initially denied. But they did not give up and continued to put in hours of work – sometimes seven hours at a stretch – on their competitio­n robot, with plans to ship it to Gambians living in the US, who would compete in their place.

“We worked hard. And even when we didn’t get it, we worked hard,” said Bah, who added that he was just excited to see The Gambia represente­d in the internatio­nal competitio­n. But he was thrilled when he heard the State Department had reversed its decisions. “I’m proud to be here.”

On Tuesday, First Daughter Ivanka Trump came to the hall and met with five other all-girl squads, including the teams from Jordan, Brunei, Vanuatu and the US.

She then pulled the lever to start a friendly match between the six teams.

Kawsar Roshan, a 15-year-old member of Team Afghanista­n, said Trump was welcoming, telling her through a translator: “You’re most welcome. I’m happy you made it to the US.” – The Washington Post

 ??  ?? Kawsar Roshan, a member of the Afghan all-girl robotics team who got visas to attend the competitio­n only after President Trump intervened.
Kawsar Roshan, a member of the Afghan all-girl robotics team who got visas to attend the competitio­n only after President Trump intervened.

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