“I am from El-Geneina. I am the oldest of six siblings, with two sisters and three brothers. I have been here for more than a year and also share the shelter with two of my cousins. My aunt, my mom’s sister, went back to Sudan a few weeks ago to try to find her husband, who has been missing for months.
Life here is okay. My days consist of playing football, praying, and playing football again. When playing football, I always have the same position: wing-back. My favorite team is Real Madrid. Look! I have their logo on my sweatpants. And my favourite player remains Cristiano Ronaldo, even though he’s not playing there anymore.
My brother, he’s for Barcelona, he wears their jersey all the time. This is how we play all the time: Madrid against Barcelona.
At first, we had a ball, but it has worn out over time. So, we stuffed a sock with plastic and play with that now.
There is a football pitch nearby the camp, that’s where we play, always the same 24 kids, enough to assemble two teams. I met some of them in the camp but knew others from El-Geneina already.
Often, neighbors who fled are in contact during the journey from Sudan, so those who arrive first wait at the border to welcome the new arrivals and take them to their block so they can settle there. In that way, we recreate our former neighborhood in the camp and stay surrounded by the ones we know.
Sometimes, I also go around the camp to pick up wood for my mother to cook with. I also have to do some work to support my family. I am a part-time cobbler. I go to the market several times a week to polish shoes and repair others as I learned to sew. The food given by humanitarian organisations is not enough, so I buy a little of vegetables and even meat as these is not provided by the aid.
In the future, I would like to be a doctor, to help and heal people—all the people. I know MSF as they run a paediatric clinic not far from the border. I have been there once, with the mother of my friend who was there.”