1,736 footballs and netballs given new homes; 67 schools, three orphanages, two care centres and one child’s prison visited; well over 2,000kms covered; nine Tanzanian towns/cities frequented with five brilliant drivers – our Great Football Giveaway project finishes today after 19 days in Tanzania. But I am sure this is not the end. The group now goes its separate ways physically – Rachael and Patch back to London, Chris and Becky out to Zanzibar for a few days, Katherine heading home to Amsterdam and Steph off to the north of the country to take on Africa’s highest mountain – but the work we have started in Mbeya feels to have barely scratched the surface. Or dust of which there is endless in South West Tanzania.
We have met several people that have had a deep impact on our time out here, three in particular who deserve special mention for the selfless work they do, day in, day out, in their local communities; Deborah McCracken who runs the Olive Branch for Centre, Dr Alex Lengeju running SOS Villages in Dar and Arthur Mbumbuka of Youth Build Future in Mbeya. All of them dedicate their own lives, energy and limited resources to help give children, as many as they can reach, better lives. Arthur, in particular, acted as our very own Mbeya host, guide and ‘go to’ man and welcomed us into his home from start to finish of the trip. A lovely man, the work Arthur currently does through Youth Build Future and the plans he has for the future are inspiring. All three that I have named are heroes to us and I thank them for everything they helped us all with during our short time out here.
The very last few footballs were excitedly handed out before noon yesterday, an emotion filled morning. However, our final ‘official’ football drop visit took place on Sunday morning. This visit was one of our most harrowing. A trip to Mbeya Children’s Prison to give some much needed footballs and netballs to kids who only have access to the outdoors for an hour a day, opened our eyes to wider problems that Tanzania faces. Two words that don’t sit right together – children and prison. Meeting over 15 of the prison’s inhabitants, kids aged between 8 and 18 years old, whose crimes ranged from suspected murder (not always proven) to stealing a mobile phone to buy much needed food for them and their starving families, has proved impossible to forget.
Through playing outdoors with these kids for an hour, our superficial experience of the prison was a positive one and it would be easy for us to mentally leave these children behind in the (false) belief that their existence is a pleasant one. Truth is we were not able to witness the reality of their lives – cramped dormitory cells, repetitive meals, regimented lives, no meaningful rehabilitation system in place. The children acted as a family unit, some clearly more secure inside the jail than they had been in their previously fractured lives with no support or family outside of the prison walls. It was difficult to comprehend what some of these children had and continue to go through. We will never know. But what struck us in the short time we were there was the immeasurable joy that the balls brought to them all. Having the footballs to play with allowed them, for a short time, to melt into being kids once more and that was a privilege to witness. I hope the (small) gift of the balls provides some sign of hope and love to each of the children locked away inside those walls. If ever there were kids that deserved that, these were them.
Our time out here has, for each of us, put into perspective how fortunate we are to have so much in our own lives – the basics for living (free flowing water, as much food as we want, education and medical supplies, electricity at all times), a network of support, loving friends and family, freedom of speech, and the luxury to live our lives in the way we choose. Many of the people that we have met in Mbeya may lack obvious material possessions but their core values are amazing and what they are truly rich in far outweighs material wealth. They embrace joy, love and respect for others, enjoy a greater freedom of time, demonstrate effortless grace and an unbreakable desire to work hard, to learn and to help others each and every day – values that put many westerners to shame.
As we write, news has just reached us of the meaningless, destructive and violent riots across the city of London. Shocking scenes and an embarrassment to our nation, never have I been more relieved to be far away. The people causing such unprovoked damage in the UK could benefit from spending some time out here to learn and observe the true meaning of respect, pride and a sense of community.
I only hope that when we return to our roots and previous lives, amongst the thousands of photos, video footage and memories we each have, we will never forget all that we have experienced and felt during this Great Football Giveaway. To give more, to take less, to get back to enjoying the simple things in life, to share everything we have with others. Not much is needed to bring joy to someone’s life – a football and a smile have worked time and time again out here.
Far harder to measure is the effect that the balls will have on all those we have met. What does the child walking innocently along an empty dust track with his bike and sugar beet, as he does day in day out, say to his family when he sprints home with his new football surprisingly thrust upon him by some over-zealous Muzungos driving past? The primary school with over 1,000 pupils and not a single football for sports classes – how do they begin to use the 18 new balls they now have overflowing their once bare sports cupboards? The spike in increased school attendance this provokes from kids desperate to return to school if only to play with real footballs, is this sustained over time? How many lives might be saved by innocently reading the two messages neatly emblazoned on the 1,500 footballs provided by Alive & Kicking (‘Malaria Kills – use a mosquito net’ and ‘Play safe – prevent Aids/HIV’)? There are many so questions we have, impossible to list them all here.
As well as sharing with us the biggest smiles we have ever seen, the kids were all quick to realise that you can’t play football on your own. We hope and strongly believe that the balls given out will all be shared and have a wide sphere of influence, far greater than the original pair of hands that tightly grasped each and every ball we hand delivered.
It has been an amazing and humbling experience.
Children are children the world over. Simple pleasures make people smile. A football can do that. Thank you everyone for every ball you have donated. The Great Football Giveaway is great because of you.
Over and out.
Steph, Rachael, Katherine, Becky, Chris and Patch
Another brilliant description of your Zambian adventure – they have really conjured up a picture of the enthusiasm on all sides. All the blogs need to be put together in an article and published
Comment by Richard.Kinder — November 19, 2008 @ 12:20 pm