First Time in Paradise
A
good friend who is a high school teacher, told me recently about one of her
students who arrived in the UK as an asylum seeker in 2020. The
teenager had arrived at Dover with three other children following a
dangerous cross-channel journey from France. This followed an epic journey from Sudan to reach Europe in the first place. As an unaccompanied
asylum-seeker, he was settled in Scotland and arrived here just as winter was setting
in. He must have felt very far from home in the gloom of a Scottish winter.
My
friend described him a hard-working, positive and resilient lad, who is an excellent
footballer and these qualities have helped him adjust to life in a new country
and make new friends. He became very fond of Celtic Football Club and watching
them avidly on tv. He told her it was his dream to one day see them play at
Celtic Park. Today that dream becomes a reality when the teenager who risked
his life crossing the channel will join 60,000 other Celtic
fans watching the Hoops take on St Johnstone. When the game is over, I’m
certain Celtic will have one more lifelong fan following them.
His
trip to see Celtic was facilitated by the excellent people of the Kano
Foundation who have now arranged for over 12,000 youngsters to see Celtic play
for free. In an era where the poor behaviour of some of those who attach
themselves to football grabs all the headlines, organisations like the Kano
Foundation quietly do wonderful things. It’s worth recounting the roots of this
charity and the role it has played in bringing so many deserving youngsters to watch professional football when they might
not have otherwise managed it. Their own website describes the charity’s
origins in the following way…
‘The KANO
Foundation took inspiration from the highly successful “Bringing Martin Home”
fundraising effort that was undertaken by the Celtic support. Overnight in
2008, Martin Kane, a Glasgow Celt living in Australia, was struck down by a
rare neurological condition called Devic’s Syndrome. The condition is an
extreme form of multiple sclerosis and causes the immune system to attack the
protective material that covers the nerves.
‘Martin, known
as “Kano” to his friends, was a regular contributor to the Celtic Quick News
forum. When other members of the forum found out about his situation they
quickly kicked off a fundraising effort to raise £60,000 to pay for
modifications to his house to get him home for Christmas with his family, after
spending a year in hospital. One fundraising event was a bucket collection
outside Celtic Park on a match-day. The overall campaign exceeded the target
and it was decided to use some of the extra money to take a group of children,
who had volunteered at the bucket collection, to a match at Celtic Park. The
idea for The KANO Foundation was born.’
The
Kano Foundation uses money raised by Celtic supporters and local businesses to
purchase season tickets which they use to gain entry to the stadium for groups
of children they are working with on a given match day. They currently have 186
season tickets and their usually boisterous group is easy to spot on match days
in the lower Lisbon Lions stand. Their patrons include Tom Boyd, Henrik
Larsson, John Higgins and Scott Brown.
Following
the sad passing of Martin ‘Kano’ Kane in 2015, his comrades kept his spirit
alive in the foundation which bears his nickname. They have impacted positively
on the lives of literally thousands of children who saw their first Celtic
match thanks to the Foundation. In doing so they have undoubtedly won some new
fans for Celtic but the principles for which they stand are bigger than that.
It's about free football for children regardless of background or circumstance.
Many of us enjoyed that privilege in the days when lifting kids over the
turnstile was the done thing. It’s about teaching them about being sporting and
respectful of others and introducing them to the fun and exhilaration you can
experience watching professional football.
So
as Paradise roars out its backing for the Bhoys today, think of that
teenager from far off Sudan who will be experiencing it all for the first time.
His eyes will be full of that wonder we all had as kids when we first
experienced a game at Celtic Park. He’ll look around him and breath in sights
and sounds that will live with him forever.
You
may be in a new land, young fella, but you will most certainly never walk
alone. I hope you have a great time and you come back to Celtic Park many
times. Welcome to Paradise.
Should
you wish to learn more about the work of the Kano Foundation or donate to this
excellent charity, please click the link below.
Click here for... Kano Foundation
Thanks for the info ref. Kano Foundation and what a game to see on your 1st. visit.
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