More Than Just a Game: Football v Apartheid

More Than Just a Game: Football v Apartheid

by Marvin Close (Author), Prof. Chuck Korr (Author)

Synopsis

The most important football story ever told.

`It is amazing to think that a game that people take for granted all around the world, was the very same game that gave a group of prisoners sanity - and in a way, gave us the resolve to carry on the struggle'. Anthony Suze, Robben Island Prisoner.

This is the astonishing story of a unique group of political prisoners and freedom fighters who found a sense of dignity in one of the ugliest hellholes on Earth: South Africa's infamous Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was famously incarderated. Despite all odds and regular torture, beatings and daily backbreaking hard labour, these extraordinary men turned soccer into an active force in the struggle for freedom.

For nearly 20 years, these prisoners found the energy, spirit and resolve to organise a 1400 prisoner-strong, eight club football league which was played with strict adherance to FIFA rules.

The prisoners themselves represented a broad array of political beliefs and backgrounds, yet football became an impassioned and unified symbol of resistance against apartheid. They refused to let their own political differences sway their devotion to the sport, which allowed them to organise and maintain leadership right under the noses of their captors.

This league not only provided sanctuary and respite from the prisoners' cruel surroundings, it kept their minds active and many credit it with keeping them alive. More Than Just a Game chronicles their story, the politics of the time, the extraordinary characters, their heroism and the thrilling matches themselves.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: UK ed.
Publisher: Collins
Published: 30 Apr 2009

ISBN 10: 0007302991
ISBN 13: 9780007302994

Media Reviews

A fascinating account of the immense importance of the sport. The Guardian

Utterly Compelling. Independent

This story adds a compelling dimension to our understanding of the struggle against apartheid. Desmond Tutu

The unbreakable spirit of a fraternity of prisoners...reminds us of how wonderful the battered old game can be. Hugh McIlvanney

A little-known story well worth rescuing from the mists of history. The Metro

`An engaging tale.'The Guardian

'An uplifting and humbling story, that has been painstakingly researched, and lovingly told.' Yorkshire Post

Author Bio

Chuck Korr is a Research Professor in the International Centre for Sport History and Culture, De Montfort University and Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. He is the author of several books.