On Tuesdays and Wednesdays I hop in
a car with a couple blokes and drive on the left all the way to Ballymena, a
half-hour away from my house in North Belfast. We are coaches for Peace
Players, an organization that uses basketball as a tool to bring together
children and youth from divided communities. My basketball skills exemplify
mediocrity, but thankfully the 8 and 9-year-olds that we coach have never seen
a ball that they weren’t allowed to kick. We only worry about teaching the
basics, and that is probably all I could teach anyway.
The
90-minute sessions that we coach are called “Twinnings;” two classes from two
schools in Ballymena are paired together. From those 50 or so kids we put
together four mixed teams. The schools in Northern Ireland are almost
completely segregated along Catholic/Protestant lines. My impression is that
less than 10% of schools are consciously integrated. A Protestant child could
conceivably learn to read, learn algebra, then calculus, read A Tale of Two Cities, and never have a
substantial conversation with a Catholic child until their gap year in Spain.
The absence of violence is not a synonym for peace. As much as we want the kids
in Ballymena to learn basketball skills, the real value of a Twinning is the
opportunity to develop friendships with children from a different community.
Every session includes a “Community Relations” segment that is meant to get the
kids talking about diversity, prejudice, and other non-basketball concerns.
My
comrades and I lead three sessions each week for 8 weeks. 3 sessions = 6
schools = about 160 children by my reckoning. There are several other Twinning
sessions happening in Belfast right now, not to mention the Under-14 girls
team, the Champions 4 Peace, and several special events. Altogether the number
of kids that encounter Peace Players in a year is in the thousands. I think it
is thrilling to watch children cross cultural boundaries by learning to play
together, and to imagine that someday they may learn to live together, as the Peace
Players slogan suggests.
"All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation." 2 Corinthians 5:18
You will notice that the Peace Players main office is in DC,
but it serves communities in Northern Ireland, South Africa, Cyprus, and
Israel/ Palestine.
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