The World Cup is up and running. Teams are swapping shirts, shaking hands and some nice celebrations (so far the South Africans opening goal celebration is top of the joyous goal scoring celebrations chart). So far so good. Just a few divers who were publicly shamed in front of worldwide tv audiences as the referees gave them their nice shiney yellow cards. Germanys Mesut Ozil getting the first yellow card for diving in the opening minutes (8th minute) of their opening game with Australia.
One moving story emerged this week on BBC TV as they did a short piece on South Africas Robben Island prisoners football league. Despite the racist authoritys initial refusal, the apartheid prisoners negotiated their rights to play the beautiful game in the stone quarry.
An internal football league was formed and the Makana Football Association was born with team names like Hotspurs,
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Politicians and leading figures who played in MFA include Minister of Defence Terror Lekota, the Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa Dikgang Moseneke, ANC President Jacob Zuma and business leader Tokyo ######wale. Some prisoners,
cheap converse shoes, like Nelson Mandela, never played as they were kept in isolation. But they said he used to cheer them on from his prison cell window.
So no moaning nor whining from todays multi millionaire footballers as they play the game we all love.
The MFA is said to have developed into an outlet and symbol of the prisoners passion and commitment to discipline. More Than Just A Game is a true story feature film, whose synopsis describes the MFA as a training ground not only for the body but for the political soul, where the principles of negotiation and dialogue [were] practiced and entrenched.
In a sense,
http://www.blogs.blozle.com/Jennyst7...ng+Safety.html, this brotherhood of football gave the players a code. As Michael Okeowo beautiful piece stated political prisoners defied apartheid rules, but adhered strictly to the FIFAs rules.
One former prison player explained at the end of the short BBC documentary, how playing football helped them to survive their oppression because, he revelead: We knew we were part of the universe of footballers.
Have many players and teams in this World Cup forgotten that they too are part of the universe of footballers who are simply thrilled just to play the beautiful game? Perhaps there is too much fear of failure stifling creativity and the unbridled joy of free flowing football? All responses welcome www.GreatMomentsOfSportsmanship.com
About The Author
PR Smith wrote the acclaimed Great Moments Of Sportsmanship a collection of true two minute stories about sportsmanship. His blog www.GreatMomentsOfSportsmanship.com has more stories like this article as well a video wall of honour,
MLB Hats, discussions and sportsmanship materials. His goal is to get sportsmanship back on the agenda of kids,
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PR Smith also writes books about marketing www.prsmith.org