Football for Hope in Khayelitsha

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29 October 2009

Africa's first Football for Hope centre, the first of 20 centres for education, public health and football that will be built across Africa as part of the 20 Centres for 2010 campaign, will be be officially opened in the Cape Town suburb of Khayelitsha in December.

A partnership venture between Fifa and streetfootballworld, 20 Centres for 2010 is the official social responsibility campaign for the 2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa™.

Khayelitsha's Football for Hope Centre will form part of the city of Cape Town's regeneration programme for Khayelitsha, one of South Africa's biggest and poorest townships.

The centre will tackle the problem of HIV/Aids in the community, and serve as a platform to improve education and health levels among young people, in addition to boasting an artificial football pitch.

The centre will be run on behalf of Football for Hope by Grassroot Soccer, a non-profit organisation with a strong track record of HIV/Aids prevention in South Africa's Western Cape province

The area on which the centre is being built is loaded with memories for local residents, and not necessarily good ones. Formerly an abandoned marshland, it was also the most dangerous part of the township.

"Until now it was considered as a crime spot, but now it's going to be seen as a place of activity that people will be able to benefit from," says the chairperson of the Khayelitsha Development Forum, Zamayedwa Sogayise, who along with many others did much to ensure the centre was built in precisely that location.

"Everyone here was delighted when we heard that the centre would be built here," says Gladys Zoleka Masiza, a local inhabitant. "Now our children will have somewhere to play.

"Sometimes our youngsters fall into delinquency and theft," adds Masiza. "Now they realise things are changing; there's a light now, and everyone can see them. They can no longer get away with doing whatever."

The centre is due to be officially opened by Fifa president Sepp Blatter on 5 December.

Source: Fifa.com

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Harnessing the power of football to bring about positive social change (Image: streetfootballworld)

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