Quantcast The GW Hatchet
College Media Network

Student spreads soccer across Africa

by Lindsay Corcoran
Hatchet Reporter

  • Print
  • Email
Anna Phillips is helping the girls of Uganda - one soccer game at a time.

Phillips, a junior majoring in international affairs and global public health from San Diego, is the founder of the Girls Kick The program, which establishes soccer and other sport teams for displaced girls and young women in war-torn northern Uganda.

The humanitarian aid project is aimed at helping displaced girls living in poor conditions in camps for Internally Displaced People due to the civil war between the Lord's Resistance Army and the Ugandan government. Many of the people living in the camps were abducted by rebel armies or traumatized by the ongoing 20-year civil war. The girls in these camps were often used as sex slaves and witnessed the effects of war.

Phillips' inspiration to start this program came from seeing these conditions first hand.

"In the IDP camps there is nothing for the young girls to do and any creative outlet would be good for them," Phillips said. "Some of my girls from the camp were abducted for years and used as wives or sex slaves."

She first traveled there after her high school graduation and spent time climbing Mount Kilimanjaro and sitting in on United Nations talks about the Rwandan genocide. She traveled there again with a program for the Global Youth Partnership for Africa, who ended up helping her launch the Girls Kick It program and returned again this fall.

"I was a college girl with a strong interest, so they helped me get started," Phillips said.

She has spent the last six months in Northern Uganda laying the foundations for her program.

An athlete on the rugby team at GW, Phillips was involved in wrestling in high school, and said playing sports can be positive for women.

"I've played a lot of normally male-dominated sports and I realized that it really levels the playing field for girls - it is very empowering," she said.

While visiting Africa the summer after her high school graduation, Phillips developed a specific interest in working to help the many impoverished people on the continent. "There is an overwhelming need in Africa," Phillips said.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools