Press Material Festivals & Screenings

Posts Tagged ‘south african street soccer’

Welcome to Cape Town


Singing in Cape Town from South Africa Street Soccer Docum on Vimeo.

streetsoccer_doc_07_-2655

Martin Afrika

Upon arrival in Cape Town we met up with David Abrahams, who runs the Western Cape Street Soccer League, and joined him as he traveled to Atlantis, a community where Vuyo, one of his young players lives, to get some paperwork signed that will allow him to play in the Homeless World Cup.  Atlantis is a Colored community and without any traffic is about an hour outside of Cape Town.  Most of the residents of Atlantis work in Cape Town and commute on community-devised public transportation every day.

David is the volunteer president for the Western Cape Street Soccer League.  He has a full time job yet spends full time hours also making sure these boys have everything they need to get to the Homeless World Cup, pursues them when they go missing, and works with local NGOs who provide support to the players outside of practice and games.  After running to Atlantis, we stopped by MyLife, a local NGO, to check out paperwork on the prison records of two of the team’s key players.

Martin Afrika is the captain of the team.  He has been living on the streets since he was a little boy and is now almost 30.  He’s been in and out of jail several times and is vigorously trying to move his life into a healthy place.  Martin is full of smiles and openness to share details of his life story.  He shared with us that he struggles to find a place to call home because when he goes back into his old community, they are afraid of him, based on his past behaviors, and he is afraid to get lost in that lifestyle again.  He has begun to form a family with his fellow teammates and speaks fondly of them and the bond they are beginning to form as brothers.

There is currently no found record that Martin exists.  Right now, he is unsure of whether or not he will be able to make it to Melbourne because he has no birth certificate, no ID card, no proof of when he was born or where he is from.  The prison system has not been helpful thus far in providing any records of his stays there and so the hunt is on for his prison records, in hopes that this will prove that he indeed does exist and can get a plane ticket to Melbourne. Martin has made it clear that this soccer team, this trip to Melbourne to play in the Homeless World Cup, are his main life sources right now.  This game, this community, are what is keeping him away from drugs and alcohol, what have helped him get into a home, find a roommate and a purpose.

The next few weeks will continue to be packed from dawn until dusk.  We have interviews lined up, more shoots and meetings with artists, days spent with individual members of the soccer team and, of course, the journey to Melbourne for the Homeless World Cup. There are many hoops that must be jumped through and details that must be completed for the 8 members of the soccer team to all make it on a flight and to the events in Australia.  They are all full of excitement and hope and their community is rallying around them.  We are anxiously waiting to see how the rest of the story unfolds.