Marking a year of the UK’s first refugee football team
Nations United, one of the United Kingdom’s first allrefugee football teams, celebrated its anniversary at an event held at the University of Chichester.
A friendly football match was played at the university’s Sports Dome, followed by a short celebratory presentation in the Mitre Lecture Theatre.
The event brought together Nations United players, staff and student coaches from the university with supporters and volunteers from Sanctuary in Chichester, a group of more than 200 local people committed to making Chichester a welcoming place for refugees and asylum seekers.
Senior lecturer in sport development and coaching at the univeristy, Danny Potter said: “For the past year, staff and students from the University of Chichester have been working in partnership with Sanctuary in Chichester volunteers to provide opportunities for refugees within our locality to play regular football and to become part of a community.”
In that time young people with a shared love for football who have come from countries such as Sudan, Somalia and Afghanistan, among others, to start a new life here have met as Nations United at the university twice a week to play in a six-a-side league and train with university staff and student coaches.
Deputy vice-chancellor, professor Seamus Higson launched the celebratory event at the end of 2018 and welcomed everyone to the university before professor Mike Lauder, director of the Institute of Sport, talked about the work of staff and students in community engagement sport projects with societal benefit to the institute, the university and the wider community.
Roger Pask, chairman of Sanctuary in Chichester, explained that this volunteerled organisation was set up in 2016 as a response to the global refugee crisis to offer social support alongside practical and financial help to those seeking sanctuary in the city.
It helps young asylum seeking children develop English language skills, finds ways to host families who fled the war in Syria, provides drop-in sessions where refugees meet residents, build genuine friendships and share experiences in a safe and welcoming environment and promotes understanding and raises awareness about the issues facing refugees and asylum seekers locally and in the UK.
Jon Bowra, a Sanctuary in Chichester volunteer, joined others for a panel discussion to mark the occasion.
He said: “In 12 months Nations United has gone from an idea to a well-established and wellsupported project.
“Our principles focus on facilitating a fun-orientated and empowering experience that truly embraces diversity and inclusion and we are fortunate to have developed a very good partnership with the University of Chichester to support us in our aims.
“We have met well over 50 unaccompanied asylum seeking children from at least 10 countries, each with their own unique stories, hopes and personalities.
“I hope we have been able to enrich their lives as much as working with them has enriched ours.”
Steve Gough, who was approached by Roger Pask 12 months ago to facilitate the project, said: “One year on, this event is an opportunity to both celebrate and formalise the relationship that has evolved with the University of Chichester.
“This partnership not only offers the facility for the lads to play football on a regular basis, it has also the potential for them to engage in so many other educational and social opportunities.
“Along the way we have connected with so many positive people who do really want to make a difference to the lives of these vulnerable yet incredibly resilient young people.
“Hopefully, between us all, we have managed to enable the lads to develop a sense of belonging in a space in which they feel free to enjoy the game that they love.”
The event concluded with an exchange of memorandum of understanding between the university and Sanctuary in Chichester.