Mohamed Abu Jalda who is currently living in a camp for displaced people after fleeing his home, practices on the beach in the Al-Mawasi area of Rafah in the south of the Gaza Strip.
He spoke to UN News’s Ziad Taleb.
“I am Mohamed Abu Jalda, a player for the Rafah Services Club a football team in the first division in Gaza.
I had a big ambition to become a great football player like others outside the Gaza Strip, but because of the war, my ambition and my life were delayed. I’m now 20 years old, trying to become a professional, but I can’t because I live in Gaza under constant fire.
Every day I feel like I’m dying; may God give us patience to endure this life. I am from Rafah, but I now live in the Shaboura camp for displaced people in the Al-Mawasi area of Rafah.
It’s been five months since I was moved there.
Whenever I find some free time and feel like playing football, I head to the beach, the only place where I can play.
We were displaced and no one came to look for us. I want my voice to reach the world.
My dream and ambition is to play football. I’ve had this ambition since I was 10 years old, but now I’m over 20, and I see nothing because I live in Gaza under this oppression.
‘What makes me different?’
Why can’t I become a football player? What makes me different from anyone else in the world? I have ears like them, a nose like them, and feet like them; there is nothing different.
Because of the war, no opportunities have come my way. Before the war, I was physically fit, but now things have changed due to the displacement we are living through.
I try to train every three days on the beach to fulfill my ambition and hope that my voice reaches the world, because I have the right to become a professional footballer as much as anyone else.
I hope that God grants me success to become a football player.
I am proud to be from Gaza and I hope to play for the Palestinian national team, because this is my right.
Let them test me, and I will show all the skills I have in football.”
Source: news.un.org