Team Sports

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Team sports can be antithetical to peace, broadly defined. They spawn tribalistic confrontation. Soccer rivalries have generated hooliganism and riots. They jockey for control of academic agendas. They perpetuate atavistic gender stereotypes (especially prior to the American Title 9 provisions for equality of male and female sports). They encourage the "greed is good, show me the money" ethos at the expense of loyalty to place, team, or fans. Some, such as American football, are dangerous by design.

On the other hand, there is no denying the value of team camaraderie, self-esteem, discipline, competition, cooperation, respect for others, and tolerance of diversity. These pay-offs are important not just for the actual competitors, but for their families, friends, and neighborhoods. One of the most important social changes over the last few decades has been the recognition that these advantages should not be reserved for the most gifted male athletes. A rainbow of teams and leagues has sprung up, bringing sport opportunities to competitors with a broad range of abilities.

To be clear, we are not making a case for team as distinct from individual sports. Obviously, individual sports (such as boxing) can be dangerous. Likewise, individual sports offer many of the same advantages as team sports; in fact, in the scholastic context and increasingly at the professional level, individual sports are organized in teams. The focus of this page is, to that extent, an arbitrary choice, intended to facilitate editorial decisions.

Elderly Women's Soccer in South Africa

The bakegula (granny) league was started up in the hopes that this sort of exercise would have a salutary effect on the health of these senior citizens. According to the participants, it has worked."

"A granny takes a penalty during a training session in Nkowankowa Township, outside Tzaneen in the Limpopo province, about 600 km (372 miles) outside Johannesburg, October 8, 2009... Twice a week, the grannies swap domestic chores for football, donning soccer boots instead of their usual rubber sandals to play in local matches." REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko. More photos



However Tall the Mountain: Another Soccer Story

In 2004, Awista Ayub, an Afghan immigrant to the U.S., formed the Afghan Youth Sports Exchange and brought eight Afghan girls to the U.S. to play soccer. In her new book However Tall the Mountain, Ayub tells the story of the young athletes who left their war-torn country to play the game the loved. Listen to the interview. Or read an excerpt from the book.




Refugees Bounce Back

National Public Radio's Renee Montagne talks with reporter Warren St. John of The New York Times and soccer coach Luma Mufleh. St. John's new book, Outcasts United: A Refugee Team, an American Town, follows the 2006 season of the 'Fugees, a soccer team for refugee children in a small town just outside Atlanta. Listen to the interview. Or read the transcript.




On the Other Hand...

Egypt-Algeria World Cup anger turns violent in Cairo


 

BBC: Friday, Nov. 20, 2009

Riot police in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, quelled a violent demonstration near the Algerian embassy in the early hours of Friday.

Egyptian protesters reportedly hurled firebombs at police protecting the embassy and overturned a police van.

Egypt's interior ministry said 35 people were injured.

The clashes stem from Egypt's defeat by Algeria in a World Cup qualifying match on Wednesday, securing Algeria the last African place for next year's finals.

Read the BBC article.

 

Contact

If you are interested in participating in Moving Mountains or have any feedback, contact Mountain Legacy Projects Coordinator Seth Sicroff at sicroff@gmail.com; 511 W. Green St., Ithaca NY, 14850 USA; (607) 256-0102.

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