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Sunday, June 30, 2013

Where Football is Not Everything: Brazil vs. Cameroon

Growing up, I had the impression that football (soccer) was greatly cherished in Brazil. Whenever I heard people talk about Brazil, it was often in connection to football and the name of Pele was often mentioned. I was told how everyone, well, almost everyone in Brazil grows up playing football. That was why they were so good in that sport. Perhaps this was just stereotypical but this stereotype colored my imagination. I had come to think that if Brazilians were to choose between football and anything else, they would choose football.

However, this whole view of Brazil was shattered during the current Confederations Cup taking place in that country (the tournament ends today and Brazil are playing Spain in the final). During this game, many, many Brazilians have been demonstrating even at the same time their national team is playing. And the demonstrations were not based on their losing a game in the tournament - in fact, they have not lost a game in the tournament. Rather, they were demonstrating because they felt that the leaders of their country were spending more money on football than on health care and education, which they apparently thought deserved more attention than football.

In Cameroon, however, we have been taught that football is everything, especially when we are winning. In fact, during important international tournaments nothing else happens in the country as people become enthralled with what is going on. If the current Confederations Cup were happening in Cameroon, no one would even think of demonstrating about anything. It would be more so if Cameroon were winning. Cameroon's reputation has in large part been built around football and Roger Milla is the most popular Cameroonian around the world because of his footballing antics. When Cameroon is in a tournament, everything in the country stops. And we are not even half as good as Brazil!

Paul Biya and his people have milked every ounce of Cameroon's successful participation in football tournaments in the past thirty years he has exhausted in power. Drawing on the victories of Cameroon's national football team, Paul Biya has even said that he cannot leave office because there is no need to change a team that is winning. That was when Cameroon's team was winning. Right now, however, the team has been losing and losing big. Even with that, the great fight in the country is around football not health care or education. Brazilians may a thing or two to teach Cameroonians both about how to play football and how to set our priorities straight.

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