National Post

Wheelchair basketball ‘positive’ diversion

- Charlton Doki

• Warnings of possible genocide hang over the world’s youngest nation, but here on a basketball court under a fierce morning sun, South Sudan’s civil war seems a world away.

Flashing up and down the court in blue and yellow jerseys, the players laugh and sweat as their wheelchair­s jostle for position.

This wheelchair basketball tournament in South Sudan’s capital, Juba, is the culminatio­n of a two- week training session run by Jess Markt, a coach from Colorado who has led similar programs in countries ravaged by conflict.

The disabled young South Sudanese men, drawn from various ethnic groups, are split into four teams that compete as dozens of spectators cheer them on.

“The biggest lesson I have learned from these guys is the power of positive thought and perseveran­ce,” Markt said. “They are very poor. Many of them are living in a camp outside the city or they live in rural areas that are very difficult situations, especially for disabled persons, and yet they are on the court playing, laughing and joking as though they don’t have any care in the world.”

Many of the players were injured in South Sudan’s decades- long struggle for independen­ce from Sudan that ended with the creation of the new nation in 2011. The country has known little peace since 2013, when the rivalry between President Salva Kiir and deputy Riek Machar descended into a civil war in which thousands have been killed amid ethnic tensions.

The wheelchair basketball training marked the first time some of the men had been involved in sports, and Markt said he had to teach them how to work together as a team.

James Amoudit Makuei, 19, who travelled hundreds of kilometres to take part, said he hopes to share his skills with other disabled people in his hometown of Yirol.

“I had never played basketball before,” he said. “But I have learned a lot of things from the coaches here. ... And now I consider myself a basketball player.” He said he dreams of playing for the national team.

Peter Bol Wal, a playercoac­h who was among the first South Sudanese to play wheelchair basketball, said more disabled people in the capital are embracing the sport.

“This basketball has helped unite us as people with disabiliti­es,” he said. “We love each other and we do not talk about our tribal difference­s.”

Markt, who began playing wheelchair basketball at age 19 after a spinal cord injury, described his experience in South Sudan as “unforgetta­ble.” He recalled one young man, a polio victim, who shouted “Oh my God!” when he scored for the first time.

“That, to me, is the greatest thing about this type of program,” Markt said. “It is helping people who have amazing challenges that they are dealing with in their lives realize how powerful they can be.”

 ?? BULLEN CHOL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A wheelchair basketball player eyes the ball as coach Jess Markt, right, looks on in Juba, South Sudan.
BULLEN CHOL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A wheelchair basketball player eyes the ball as coach Jess Markt, right, looks on in Juba, South Sudan.

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