More donated Lincoln Youth Soccer (LYS) uniforms will be appearing on young African athletes as another drive to collect used uniforms is underway.
LYS is collecting clean soccer uniforms and other equipment in a box near the registers at Donelan’s. “The soccer uniforms don’t have to be from Lincoln; uniforms from other towns or club teams are just as valuable to these kids,” said LYS Treasurer Ted Charrette. The group is also collecting extra cleats, balls, ball bags, nets, and other types of soccer equipment, as well as tax-deductible donations that will be used to buy more used uniforms from thrift stores.
This is not the first time that LYS uniforms will be finding their way to Africa. Several years ago, Lincoln resident Sandy Storer donated 24 jerseys collected by fellow Lincolnite Margit Griffith to a town in Uganda. Last summer, she was photographing a FundaField tournament in Kiboga, a remote village in northern Uganda, and was startled to see one of the players dressed in the familiar green shirt.
In a separate effort about a year ago, Heather Broglio, another Lincoln resident, brought LYS uniforms to children in a hospital in Ethiopia.
FundaField is a nonprofit that works to enrich the lives of less fortunate kids in the developing world through sports, specifically building soccer fields and collecting gear. Storer initially got involved in because her son went to college with the people who started the organization.
Storer has gone to Uganda several times as a chaperon and photographer for FundaField and has also piloted a project to teach soccer players how to use donated digital cameras together with battery-powered printers to document the successes of the organization. In the future she plans to teach Ugandan women how to use the donated camera equipment to document their own lives.
Toby Frost says
Gosh – It felt a bit uncomfortable and a bit sad to see those solemn, almost angry looking faces in the photo of the Ugandan kids in their soccer shirts – and then it occurred to me: smiling for the camera is so much part of our social tradition – but it probably isn’t for those Ugandan kids – and for lots of other kids around the world.
Sandy Storer, do you agree?