Afghan women’s soccer captain in Canada helps evacuate youth squad to safety

Afghan women’s soccer captain in Canada helps evacuate youth squad to safety

Farkhunda Muhtaj flew from Canada to Portugal to pay a surprise visit to the soccer team she helped rescue. The weeks spent trying to help arrange their evacuation from Afghanistan had finally paid off.

“The reason we took on this mission (to evacuate the team) was to ensure they can aspire and play the sport they love,” said Muhtaj, captain of the Afghanistan women’s senior national team, who met the youth team in the capital Lisbon on Wednesday.

From her home in Canada, where she works as assistant soccer coach at a local university, Muhtaj has been in touch with the girls throughout the evacuation process, codenamed Operation Soccer Balls. It managed to rescue a total of 80 people — the female youth team and family members, including babies.

They landed in Portugal on Sept. 19.

When Muhtaj showed up on Wednesday night, the girls were ecstatic. They hugged. Some could not hold back the tears.

It’s unclear when Muhtaj arrived in Canada but attended high school at David and Mary Thomson C.I. before enrolling at York University in 2015. Muhtaj, now working as a Y ork University a ssistant soccer coach   and playing Ontario’s League 1 with Vaughn Soccer ( since 2015) , also teaches at a school Newcastle, Ont, a skill that helped her reassure the girls as they moved from safehouse to safehouse.

Muhtaj led them through virtual exercise and yoga sessions and gave them homework assignments, including writing autobiographies , reported AP. While she couldn’t share details of the rescue with them, or their families, Muhtaj told the outlet she asked them to believe in her and others “blindly.”

“They been through so much, so many challenges,” Muhtaj said. “They were just resilient, and they were able to make it happen.”

One relative, 25-year-old Zaki Rasa, recalled the chaos at the Kabul airport, where he spent three anguished days. He is now delighted to be in Portugal and wants to continue his studies.

“There is some uncertainty about the future,” he said. “The important thing is that we are safe.”

Leaving her homeland Afghanistan was painful, says 15-year-old Sarah. But now safely in Portugal, she hopes to pursue her dream of playing soccer professionally — and perhaps meeting her idol, star striker Cristiano Ronaldo.

Sarah was one of several players from Afghanistan’s national female youth soccer squad who fled their country in fear after the Taliban hardline Islamist movement seized power in August.

Portugal has granted asylum to the young footballers.

“I’m free,” she said, smiling from ear-to-ear as she visited Lisbon’s landmark Belem Tower on the River Tagus with her mother and teammates.

“My dream is to be a good player like Ronaldo — and I want to be a big business woman here in Portugal,” she said.

She hoped to go back home one day but only if she can live freely.

Her mother, who requested that Reuters did not use their surname, had experienced first-hand a previous era of Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001. She is less optimistic they will ever be able to return.

Taliban leaders have promised to respect women’s rights but under their first government, women could not work and girls were banned from school. Women had to cover their faces and be accompanied by a male relative when they left home.

A senior Taliban official said after the Aug. 15 takeover that women would probably not be allowed to play sport because it was “not necessary” and their bodies might be exposed.

Read this article as it originally appeared in National Post on October 1, here.

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