The Guardian (USA)

We Dare to Dream review – powerful study of what refugee athletes did at the Olympics

- Cath Clarke

There’s nothing that Waad Al-Kateab – the citizen-journalist turned Oscarnomin­ated director of For Sama – needs to do to make her latest documentar­y more affecting. The resilience and strength of character of the athletes she films competing for the Refugee Team at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics reaches for your heart and gives it a good twist. The team was first introduced at the Rio Games in 2016 in response to the refugee crisis and gives athletes a scholarshi­p to pay for living costs and training – as well as a flag to compete under.

And what a team they are. Kimia Alizadeh Zonoozi was 18 when she became Iran’s first female summer Olympic medallist, winning a bronze in Taekwondo at Rio. But she couldn’t bear to keep parroting the propaganda she was ordered to spew by the state: that men and women are equal in Iran, that black is white. She now lives in Germany. Unbelievab­ly, her first opponent in Tokyo is her best friend and former teammate, Iran’s Nahid Kiani Chandeh.

Then there is Cyrille Tchatchet, a gentle-mannered weightlift­er (with thighs the circumfere­nce of an ancient oak). Cyrille walked out of the 2014 Commonweal­th Games in Glasgow, fearing for his safety back home in Cameroon. He spent two months living rough in Brighton, and was standing on the edge of a cliff contemplat­ing suicide when he spotted a Samaritans poster and called. Two police cars arrived and talked him down. We also meet Saeid Fazloula, a canoeist originally from Iran, Taekwondo athlete and Syrian refugee Wael Fawaz Al-Farraj and South Sudanese runner Anjelina Nadai Lohalith. They have all experience­d trauma on a scale few of us can imagine, their

 ?? ?? Resilience and strength of character … We Dare To Dream
Resilience and strength of character … We Dare To Dream

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