Afghanistan just cannot catch a break. Or so it would seem. It’s one blow after the other, dealt by the Taliban regime that has been brutal particularly on certain sporting teams, or the earthquake that has shaken the nation and its people.
But one group of sports persons far away from home are quietly and determinedly working to try and bring some respite to their beleaguered country.
FIFA seems to have taken a strong step towards getting Afghan women athletes a voice and an identity. Thousands of kilometers away in the UK, a group of gritty girls who fled Kabul are training under the banner of Afghan refugee.
Is this the start to the tide turning for a section of Afghanistan athletes?
Sports in Afghanistan fighting for survival. Men’s cricket still continues, but even that takes place outside the country.
Everything else? Banned by the Taliban – citing religious reasons. The biggest casualty? Women’s sport. Shut down. Dreams crushed. Athletes silenced.
But thousands of kilometers away from Kabul – in England – a new chapter is being written. A group of Afghan women refugees have found their freedom again through football. They are not just playing a game – they are reclaiming their identity.
How FIFA’s aiding Afghan women’s football
FIFA has stepped in, organising an ID camp for Afghan refugee women athletes. It’s more than just a camp – it’s the start of a new era. An era where women who were forced to burn their shirts now wear them with pride.
“Basically, when we hear the Taliban took over the country and they’ve got a message that (women) who are playing football, they’re in danger and are in risk. She basically publicly in social media and her platform and she say, burn your football shirts or all trophy,” said Elaha Safdari, one of the Afghan female footballers who attended the FIFA camp.
Four years on, the same athletes are stronger than ever. They are no longer just refugees who fled to survive. They are symbols of resistance. Role models. Pioneers.
“So this is the shirt from Afghan’s women’s national team. It’s our jersey. And every time I look at this jersey I’m telling myself I’m not playing only for myself. I’m playing for all the women and girls who were told to be silent,” Safdari continued.
This is more than a refugee story. It is Taliban versus the athletes. The regime tried to crush women’s rights. They banned sports, banned education, banned expression.
But what they couldn’t ban was the spirit of these athletes.
Football’s not alone in defying Taliban’s draconian laws
And football isn’t alone. Cricket has also raised its flag . Australia has given sanctuary to over 20 afghan women cricketers and their families. More than 120 people were saved through humanitarian visas, arranged with the help women cricketers.
And they aren’t just surviving – they’re playing competitively, carrying the Afghan flag high.
Earlier this year, they played their first game . And they didn’t just compete, but won hearts.
The homes of these women were taken away by the Taliban. But sport has given them a new kingdom. And inside that kingdom, they aren’t just fighters – they are Queens. Queens who aren’t playing for survival anymore, but are playing for supremacy.
The anger, the frustration, the heartbreak has been transformed into purpose. With the Afghan flag on their jersey, a smile on their face, and a dream to go higher, they have turned sport into a weapon of resistance.
This is the reality today: Taliban wanted to erase women’s sport. But women’s sport has become the face of resistance against the Taliban.
These Afghan athletes are showing the world that while a regime can ban games, it can never ban hope.
They are writing a new playbook. One where women who were once told to burn their dreams are now lighting a torch for future generations.
And every match they play, every jersey they wear, is a message to the Taliban: “You can silence voices. But you can’t kill spirit.”
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