Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • UNESCO board backs Egypt’s Khaled el-Enany as its next chief
  • Venezuela’s Maduro says US Embassy ‘false flag’ bombing foiled in Caracas
  • After two years of war, do Israelis support Netanyahu?
  • Harvard ruled as legally liable for theft of body parts from morgue
  • Live: Israel’s genocide continues across Gaza two years since start of war
  • LeBron James’ post causes retirement rumours as Lakers ticket prices rise
  • One killed, several injured in Syrian Army, SDF clashes in Aleppo: Reports
  • Reports: How the US funded Israel’s wars on Gaza, Lebanon, Iran
  • Marc Marquez to miss two MotoGP rounds with shoulder injury
  • As Israel systematically destroys Gaza City, those fleeing have few options
  • Why is the US military is being deployed in US cities?
  • Trump walks back offer to talk to Democrats as government shutdown extends
  • How Ladakh protest leader Sonam Wangchuk went from Indian hero to ‘traitor’
  • Day one of Israel and Hamas indirect talks ends on ‘positive’ note in Egypt
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,321
  • US sends another ‘third-country’ deportation flight to Eswatini
  • Cycling team to drop Israel name after mass pro-Palestinian Vuelta protests
  • AMD’s shares surge on deal to supply AI chips to OpenAI
  • Indians hard hit as US student visas decline by a fifth from last year
  • White House reverses Trump claim firings have begun amid gov’t shutdown
  • Study finds US asthma inhalers produce same emissions as 500,000 cars
  • Trump announces 25 percent tariffs on medium and heavy imported trucks
  • The difficult lives of Gaza’s babies born on October 7
  • Israel deports Greta Thunberg and other Gaza flotilla activists
  • Death toll in Indonesian school collapse rises to at least 60

Tackling taboos: Women’s football in Sudan

By Al Jazeera Published 2015-05-03 02:07 Updated 2015-05-03 02:27 Source: Al Jazeera

Khartoum, Sudan – Under the blistering afternoon sun, two footballers train on a dusty, uneven pitch. Planes heading to the nearby Khartoum airport pass overhead, but nothing can pierce the stifling heat of this shadeless spot of parched, rocky earth.

“We used to hold our training sessions in the grassy outdoor court there,” says Sara Edward, a 29-year-old wearing shorts and a long-sleeved T-shirt, pointing to a building just metres away. “Then the facility owners accused us of destroying the trees at the side gates of the complex. The actual culprits were some monkeys.”

But Edward knows the real issue here is not trees or monkeys. Sudan has just two women’s football teams, and she is the captain of one of them. Not everyone in Sudan approves of women’s football, she tells Al Jazeera while placing several balls in a pile, preparing for the arrival of her team-mates.

These women are tackling their country’s social taboos in the hopes that they may one day be able to represent Sudan in international tournaments. Forming a national women’s team and competing abroad is what Edward dreams of – and she is not alone.

My family doesn't understand my passion for football; they say it's not a sport for ladies, and I should go back to just playing handball.

by Sadiya Hassan, team member

The football team, which is not recognised by the international governing body FIFA, was established more than a decade ago. It has lost and gained members in the years since. Some got married and found their husbands to be less than enthusiastic about their commitment to the game; others relented to the disapproval of family members. Today, the youngest member is just 14, while the oldest is 29.

Twenty-seven-year-old Sadiya Hassan wears the number 13. “I have suffered the most in the team,” she says. “My family doesn’t understand my passion for football; they say it’s not a sport for ladies, and I should go back to just playing handball.” But she says she will not give up: “This is my dream. I would do anything to be able to represent Sudan.”

This sense of battling the odds inspired the team’s name, The Challenge.

“We are named The Challenge, because keeping this team going without any funding from the official football association in Sudan is not easy,” Edward says.

Without financial support or recognition from the Sudan Football Association, the team must rely on donations from women’s rights organisations to buy equipment. Other costs are paid from their own pockets.

“We train three times a week in this area, from five in the afternoon until seven,” explains Fatma Osman. “It’s hot, but a few of us live very far away, and we prefer to finish early so we can make it home not too late.”

The Challenge played its first competitive match in 2006 and has played in many domestic competitions since. The only other women’s team in Sudan hails from al-Ahfad, an all-female university in Khartoum. The two teams often play against each other, but they also happily take on men’s teams.

“In the beginning, some of the male teams used to underestimate us,” Edward explains. “But once we play and they see what we are capable of, their respect grows.”

The team’s coach, Ahmed Babikir, says Sudan used to have many women’s teams in the past. “We need to go back to that,” he says. “FIFA should not provide the Sudanese Football Association with any funding until they form more women’s teams and support existing ones.”

Edward hopes to contribute to the bright footballing future Babikir envisions, and believes the key is in introducing girls to the sport at an early age. “I am in the process of starting a football school for young girls, with the support of women’s organisations,” she says. “It’s a dream I’m working very hard for. I just need more funding.”

As their training session draws to a close, the team and their coach form a circle, piling their hands on top of one another while shouting “The Challenge”. The practice symbolises another small step in their journey towards the international arena.