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Afghan Refugees Bring Cricket to Germany | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Media ID: 55371739
Caption:

With an influx of cricket-mad Pakistan and Afghanistan asylum
seekers, the German Cricket Federation has been flooded with a simple
question: “Where can I play?” (AFP Photo/Sascha Schurmann)


Berlin – The cricket bat swings through the air and the little yellow ball sails through the gym, past several fielders, and smacks against the wall.

Batsman Sadeeq Shinwari smiles with satisfaction. Together with a group of other refugees from Afghanistan, the 20-year-old has founded a cricket team as part of a local sports club in the north German town of Preetz.

Every Tuesday since mid-February, the group has gathered in the gym to practise their favourite sport.

“We’re not that interested in football,” says Abdulwase Haleem, who came up with the idea at the end of last year.
He’s been living in northern Germany for 15 months. He tried football and was even quite good at it, but his heart belongs to cricket.

“That was our national sport, I started playing as a child,” says the 25-year-old.

At least a dozen Afghans have come to the small school gym this evening. Before they reach for their bats they form a small circle and two new players introduce themselves.

Some of the refugees have come from further afield to play, from Ploen for example, 14 kilometres away, and the city of Kiel, half an hour away by car.

Marlene Sachse is the only woman in the group. The refugee worker played an important role in setting up the team.
Of the around 350 refugees currently living in Preetz, there are 50 Afghans.

“Abdulwase is integral to everyone here,” says Sachse. She partnered up with the FT Preetz sports club and secured the team the use of the gym.

“We’re the third club in the state of Schleswig-Holstein to offer cricket,” FT Preetz chairman Ralf Loehndorf says. “We’re trying to get it rolling.”

Loehndorf is also trying to get sports equipment for the cricket team via sports associations.

Without their help, it would be almost impossible in a small club like FT Preetz, which has only 600 members. A full team kit including bats, helmets and leg guards costs around 25,000 euros (26,500 dollars).