Watch: In the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir football is giving young people the hope of changing their lives forever

by admin on November 4, 2009

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. You can also follow my posts on Twitter . Thanks for visiting!

One step forward: Even I appeal to the youths of Jammu and Kashmir to join the hands in building a new Kashmir, a prosperous and peaceful heaven on this earth.

Via Russia Today




In the Indian state of Kashmir football is giving young people the hope of changing their lives for the better. A soccer school is raising a generation away from the troubles of the conflict between India and Pakistan.

Srinagar, the state capital of Jammu and Kashmir, is an unlikely setting for a football match.

Aggression is usually far from sporting as the area has been plagued by militancy for the past two decades and has been a flashpoint between India and Pakistan for more than fifty years.

However, people come to watch the team of the International Sports Academy Trust or ISAT.

Argentine coach Juan Marcos Troia set up the football academy in 2007 when he first arrived in the state. Despite his initial fears over safety, he has gone on to mould local schoolboys into match-winners who regularly beat the more-established teams.

“We registered 400 boys in the first year up to 16-17 years old, we started coaching them for the very first time in their lives. After two years, these same boys became a B-division team, then an A-division team, and this year we have already qualified for the top division of the state,” Troia says.

In Srinagar, security is everywhere. Despite the regular curfews, protests and strikes that shut down the Kashmir valley, training at the academy continues – but it’s not been easy for these teenagers.

“It’s very difficult in the kind of climate we are living in, in this situation, where you see all the stone-pelting. We come through the stone-pelting to come for practice here. It’s really hard,” Musadiq Mehraj, an ISAT player says.

All ISAT kids here have been affected by militancy in some form, but “the beautiful game” could bring a sense of optimism back to their lives that things could improve.

The captain of the team, Basharat Bashir Baba, is one of three ISAT players selected for professional training by overseas clubs. He will soon travel to Brazil to train in Pele’s old club Santos.

It is a huge achievement for a Kashmiri youngster, especially since Basharat was initially denied a passport because his father is a former militant.

“The mentality of a Kashmiri youth is that if the police cannot change, nobody can change. But I think football can change,” Bashir Baba says.

Bashir Baba himself faced discrimination when he first played with a big club in Calcutta. Read more

Blog Widget by LinkWithin

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!
blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post: Arrested for Tweeting: US citizens were arrested and charged by the FBI for allegedly directing protests at the G20 Summit in September (Video)

Next post: Watch: Johan Galtung:The American empire will collapse by 2020