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Even though she says the images play out like a movie in her mind, it’s a scene she couldn’t possibly ever have imagined: The end of her world as she knew it, and quite possibly her own imminent demise.
“They were beating our parents, our family members, our teammates,” Fatima, who is spokesperson for the Afghanistan Women’s National Football team, told CNN Sport. “You didn’t know if you’ll be alive, or dead soon.”
The scene being described is the fall of Kabul in 2021 and the frantic rush to exit Afghanistan before the Taliban seized full control of the country.
Women and girls were particularly vulnerable, as the future they thought they could look forward to simply evaporated in front of their eyes. “You’re losing your dreams in a blink,” added Fatima.
Earlier this year the United Nations warned that “virtually every man, woman and child in Afghanistan could face acute poverty,” while in March the Taliban went back on their much-anticipated promise to let girls above sixth grade return to school.
The Afghanistan Women’s National Football team is a group of strong and independent women and knew they’d be in the Taliban’s crosshairs. They were desperate to escape as fear and panic gripped Kabul last year as the city teetered on the edge.
Their proudest achievements, everything they had worked for, suddenly turned radioactive; identifying social media accounts were scrubbed and treasured football shirts, boots, medals, and trophies were burned.
For some, the elevated status of their positions could have proved fatal.
At least one team member was recognized in the crush of people outside of the airport. “Oh look, there is a player from the Afghanistan National Football team,” somebody was heard to have said. To save their own lives, the players had to lie to the Taliban and deny it.
They spent two days hiding outside of the airport and it was another two before they boarded the C-130 transport planes that would airlift them to safety.
They got out in the nick of time — 48 hours later, a suicide bomber killed around 180 people, including 13 US servicemen and women. CNN has been told that some of the US military members killed in the blast had helped rescue the players.
But it was the moment that the planes’ wheels left the ground, as those gigantic human lifeboats roared up into the sky, that the emotions crashed over the players in waves.
When a question about the emotion of that flight was posed to Fatima she visibly crumples and excuses herself from the interview.
“Your question is too deep,” she explains, once she has composed herself, adding: “We all left everything. You know you’re never going to have those things that you had before. You don’t know about your future. You’re saying goodbye to your country where you grew up, your childhood moments, so many memories.”
Many were forced to leave their families behind to an uncertain fate, and for some of the players, the weight of their guilt in that moment was crushing.
It’s been eight months since the Afghanistan players were airlifted to safety and many have found themselves in Melbourne, Australia.
For some sports fans, Melbourne is the capital of the world, home of Formula One’s Australian Grand Prix, the Australian Open tennis tournament, and the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground. But for these Afghan players, it’s simply their new home.
The Melbourne Victory Soccer Club has taken the Afghan team under its wing and is providing facilities and coaching to maximize their potential.
Director of Football John Didulica outlined the team’s sporting opportunities and the goal of one day perhaps playing a World Cup qualifier, but he stressed that it’s principally a humanitarian program for now.
“My first hope is better lives, they’ve got very complex personal situations and if football can help them get a foothold into Australian life, that’s our ultimate objective,” Didulica told CNN Sport.
“Football has this overriding responsibility to support, not only its participants, but show the best humanity and the best in people
“And I think this team acts as a totem, to some degree, for a lot of the good that we see in football. They deserve whatever the game can offer them.”
Whilst she’s had to make major adjustments in her life, Fatima says she has discovered something that she wasn’t expecting: peace and security.
“I never felt that before in Afghanistan,” she explained, “I was afraid of so many things. [But] I found it here, peaceful moments. I said, ‘That’s it. You’re alive. You made it.'”
“Australia is a multicultural country,” defender Marsul told CNN Sport. “They accept all kinds of people. They don’t ask us, ‘Are you Muslim? Are you Christian? That’s such a good thing and Australians are such a kind people. I love it.”
Yet life is still complicated. The backup goalkeeper, Montaha, fled Afghanistan tightly clutching the hand of her 15-year-old brother.
Now, she is responsible for looking after herself, raising her brother, working, studying, and trying to preserve her dream of playing international football.
At least she is surrounded by role models she couldn’t have imagined back in Afghanistan.
“Women are playing better than men here in football, it was like, magical things! I was like, ‘Wow, women are [more] powerful than men.’ And it was the happiest thing for me.”
At the end of April, the Afghanistan team played their first match together since fleeing last August. In one of their final training sessions, the players were reunited with their former coach, the American Haley Carter.
As a former Marine, Carter was one of the team’s guardian angels, pulling strings and working back channels to get them out safely.
“It’s exciting to see them on the pitch again,” said Carter. “There’s this sense of optimism and hope for what the future will bring.”
She believes that the team’s revival is a powerful moment that transcends them all.
“The Afghanistan Women’s national team plays for everyone. Every woman, every athlete, every sport, even non-athletes. They represent the power of the women of Afghanistan, the strength and the resilience of the women of Afghanistan.
“And they’re a reminder to women, everywhere, that we can collectively do anything that we put our minds to, and we are stronger than others may think.”
But as with so many other aspects of their story, it is bittersweet for Carter.
She can’t help thinking of the players that they couldn’t get out, the families who were left behind and the military personnel who sacrificed their own lives to save so many others. “It’s heavy,” concedes Carter. “There is this weight that’s hanging over things.”
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