In WC’s shadow, Rohingya find freedom on pitch
KUALA LUMPUR: They may lack the glitz and glamour of the World Cup, but football clubs for stateless Rohingya refugees in Malaysia offer something more — a 90-minute reprieve from a grinding existence on the fringes of society.
Malaysia is home to more than 70,000 people from the Muslim minority who have fled discrimination and persecution in predominantly Buddhist Myanmar, often enduring horrific journeys at sea to escape. And while many struggle to eke out a living and are deeply scarred by the traumas of their past, football offers a welcome respite from cold, hard reality.
On a scruffy patch of ground on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur surrounded by dilapidated buildings, those painful memories seem a world away as players pass the ball and take shots before a small crowd of spectators.
“Football takes away all of my stress for 90 minutes,” Mohamad Ishak, a 17-year-old team member, told AFP. “It helps you to forget some of your problems.” Nine teams took part in a recent tournament to mark the major Islamic festival of Eid-al-Fitr.
There was a particular buzz as the tournament coincided with the World Cup. Play was punctuated by excited chatter about the latest matches in Russia and many wore shirts of their favourite teams, from Argentina to Germany. Some expressed the hope a Rohingya team might one day compete in the world’s most prestigious football tournament — an unlikely dream for an ethnic group that doesn’t even have a country to call home.
Relatively affluent Muslim-majority Malaysia has long turned a blind eye to the influx of Rohingya. Despite not officially being allowed to work, they have become a cheap source of labour in menial jobs, from cleaning to labouring on building sites. And while life is better than in Myanmar, getting by in Malaysia can still be tough for the Rohingya, who have no access to basic services such as education and healthcare.
In 2015 the Rohingya Football Club (RFC) was set up to give members something constructive to do in their free time, and provide some release from unfulfilling, insecure existences. Other Rohingya clubs have since sprung up across the country, playing against each other or local Malaysian sides.
The three-day Eid tournament gives the mostly young men something positive to focus on at a time when they may be missing family members back home and dwelling on dark memories, organisers say. RFC secretary Mohammed Faruk said it is common for Rohingya to have flashbacks to traumatic experiences, such as military crackdowns back home that have driven one million members of the minority into vast refugee camps in neighbouring Bangladesh. “There are a lot of Rohingya who lost their parents, who lost their siblings, who lost their homes,” the 23-year-old told AFP.
“It’s really awful when they think about their past.” Rakhine in western Myanmar, the Rohingya’s home state, has been repeatedly rocked by intercommunal violence over the years and the minority has often been targeted by the army and Buddhists.
Myanmar does not recognise Rohingya as citizens and officials often refer to them as “Bengalis”, reflecting a widespread belief they are immigrants from Bangladesh. In the most recent violent convulsion, some 700,000 Rohingya fled Myanmar after the military launched a brutal operation against insurgents in August that the US and the UN have labelled ethnic cleansing. The UN has said there are possible “hallmarks of genocide” with refugees bringing with them consistent testimony of murder, rape and arson, although few of the Rohingya in Malaysia are believed to be from this latest wave.
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