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Idris Elba on knife crime and why we

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IDRIS Elba was filming the 2013 biopic, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom when he experience­d something that would inspire his latest project nearly a decade later. The Luther star, 49, gained plaudits for his portrayal of Nelson Mandela in the Justin Chadwick film, which also starred Naomie Harris, and shared a joint kinship with the late South African president, fondly known as Madiba, over boxing.

Elba, star of The Wire, films like Pacific Rim, The Suicide Squad and more, joined a boxing club as a youngster, an experience he describes as a “real turning point” in his life, which taught him “discipline and control”.

Now his latest project, Idris Elba’s Fight School, which airs on BBC Two, sees the famous star explore whether boxing can help a group of young people turn their lives around and better their future.

The inception for this venture was sparked during his time in South Africa, when he visited makeshift gyms where young kids were being trained to box, to help them stay off the streets.

“They were inspiring to me. These are kids that have not very much in the way of support, but the gym was a nervous system for them - a place where they became young men,” he reflects.

The upcoming series sees him join forces with former National Boxing Champion, Rachel Bower, and fitness coach, Greg White, and the group they take in live together in a house while gaining boxing training, nutrition advice, and access to a life coach and inspiratio­nal mentors.

The goal is for them to be able to get into the boxing ring to compete in an amateur fight, with just five months of training and guidance under their belts.

“I was just like, ‘Wow, I would love to experiment [with] that discipline’... I’ve got this real passion to fight knife crime,” he says, he says, talking about the new series. “I think it’s a really, really dangerous, bad thing that’s happening in our country and it’s avoidable.

“[It’s about] finding ways to shift that energy, that anger, that sense of loss, that sense of bewilderme­nt. You come from a neighbourh­ood, there’s not much around there for you, so you carry a knife, you feel part of a gang. Well, with boxing, when you’re in the gym, you’re in a gang. You’re in a group with a bunch of people who are likeminded and you all put the work in, and when one person fights, you all fight, and that’s what that feeling is.

“I think it’s overlooked how exercise and training can help people readdress stuff.”

White, 35, who is the head coach at the Rathbone and Camden boxing club, explains how he got into the sport.

“I got in trouble with the police when I was younger. I lived on a council estate in South London and I just fed into what was happening in the community, causing problems for everyone. I needed to sort my life out and boxing did that for me. I walked into my local boxing gym and never looked back,” he says.

Bower, 39, is the head of amateur boxing at Rathbone and Hawley ABC and an England Talent

Pathway Coach, while also being a Met police detective sergeant.

“I was the one arresting Greg,” she says.

“I’m a police officer. That’s my day

 ?? ?? Idris Elba with coaches Rachel Bower Greg White
Idris Elba with coaches Rachel Bower Greg White

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