A note for the world's most courageous sports team

Footballer and UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Alphonso Davies has some words of encouragement for the Refugee Paralympic Team as the Paralympic Games kicks off in Tokyo tomorrow.

The six members of the IPC's Refugee Paralympic Team that will compete in the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.  © IPC

To the Refugee Paralympic Team,  

Tomorrow it all begins - the greatest Para sport event on earth. Congratulations for being right at the heart of it. You might be nervous now, but that’s expected. When I play for FC Bayern Munich and Canada, I get butterflies before every match.  

Please know this: as you dive into the water, as you prepare to throw, as you step into the arena, know that you are not alone. The world is behind you, including 82 million displaced people, 12 million of whom are living with a disability.  

Not everyone understands the journey you have been on. But I do and that’s an important part of what made me who I am. I was born in a refugee camp. My family and I fled war. I appreciate it’s sometimes hard to talk about the past. The experiences you’ve had, the things you’ve seen, the discrimination you’ve faced.  

I’ve read your stories and learnt about the journeys you have all been through. You are the most courageous sports team in the world right now.  

Many don’t understand how tough it is being a refugee, having been forced to flee for your safety. How tough it is being displaced in the middle of a pandemic. Tough being all alone thousands of miles from your families when you need them most. Tougher still when you have a disability. But although your path has been hard you’ve never given up.  

You have found a way to not only practice sport but to perform at the highest levels. All those years of dreaming to be on the big stage, all those lung busting sessions in the gym, that hard work and sheer determination has brought you to this moment, the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games. 

One of the things I know about sport is its power to change lives. You are all role models now with the power to inspire others. Make no mistake, what you are about to do in Tokyo will change people’s lives. There are going to be young people who will take up sport because of you. There will be refugees who, through watching you succeed, will believe they can too. And you know what, those people are the next nurses, teachers and scientists. That’s change starting with sport. 

That’s why tomorrow at the Opening Ceremony, when you lead out the athletes of 160 nations for the most important Paralympic Games in history, I’ll be watching along with the rest of the world, and we’ll all be cheering you on.  

So, go out and do your thing. Do it like you’ve never done it before. Give it 100 per cent. Don’t focus too much on the rewards and go out there with a smile on your face, knowing you worked hard to be there. That’s when you’ll be at your best. And welcome to the show – you belong here. 

Your friend and fellow refugee, 

 

Alphonso Davies 

UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador 

 

About Alphonso Davies

Born in a refugee camp in Ghana, to Liberian parents who fled the civil war in their home country, Alphonso Davies knows first-hand what it means to be a refugee. Davies and his family were resettled to Canada when he was five. At 15, Davies began playing professional football and only a year later he had his national team debut, making him the youngest player ever on Canada’s Men’s National Team. In March 2021, Alphonso Davies became the first footballer and first Canadian to be appointed as a Global Goodwill Ambassador for UNHCR. Alphonso Davies is a left-back for FC Bayern Munich and Canada Men’s National Football Team.  


About the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games 

About the Paralympic Games 

About the Refugee Paralympic Team 

For images, click here

 

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