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Kevin Baxter: Bernard Kamungo a shining example of what a kid from a refugee camp can accomplish

Kevin Baxter, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Soccer

In Nyarugusu, Kamungo and his family of eight shared a room in a shack with no electricity or plumbing. Food was always scarce, the dirt spaces between the camp's endless rows of shacks served as a playground, and planning for the future meant thinking no further ahead than tomorrow.

"Not a lot of stuff to remember," he said. "Every single day I'd wake up and do the same thing over and over."

Kamungo isn't the first soccer standout, or even the first potential Olympian, to emerge from the monotony, squalor and desperation of a refugee camp. Alphonso Davies, a Champions League winner with Bayern Munich and a World Cup starter for Canada, was born in a camp in Ghana, then emigrated to Edmonton with his family when he was 5. And distance runners Lopez Lomong, Abdihakim Abdirahman and Charles Jock are camp survivors who represented the U.S. in the Olympics or World Athletics Championships.

Their success doesn't surprise Sara-Christine Dallain, the executive director of iACT, a Southern California-based humanitarian nonprofit that has used soccer to teach teamwork, respect, responsibility and pride to more than 43,000 children in refugee camps around the world.

"There's so much potential," she said. "Just because children or families have been forced to flee their homes because of war and conflict doesn't mean that they do not have their own dreams and aspirations. In fact, these children are so motivated to dream beyond the confines of their camp and to dream [of] a life beyond war and conflict in refugee camps.

"Soccer creates an opportunity for children to work towards achieving that dream."

 

Living in a camp, Dallain said, also provides a harsh sense of perspective because nothing those children will face on a playing field or a track will be tougher than what they faced as refugees.

"People who are living in a refugee camp are resilient, right? They have to every day make decisions and determine and figure out how to survive," she said. "That strength, the mental toughness to survive and to rebuild your life is there and probably translates over to someone who's becoming an athlete."

Once he arrived in Abilene, Kamungo's skills quickly earned him a spot on his middle and high school soccer teams, where he was the district's offensive MVP and midfielder of the year. On the weekends he competed in adult pickup games.

Then he nearly tripped over the next step up the soccer ladder.

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