In August 2021 the Taliban took control of Afghanistan. Members of the Afghan Women’s National Team were forced into hiding, before they fled the country to safety in Australia with help from the team’s former captain Khalida Popal. Since then, they have built new lives in Australia and resumed playing football.
In partnership with Goal Click, hummel is now telling the stories of the players of the Afghanistan Women’s National Team.
Fatima Yousufi, 20, is a player for the team and now lives in Melbourne. She tells the story of her football career in Afghanistan, her hopes for the future, and her experiences in Australia - including speaking to a huge crowd at half-time of a Manchester United v Melbourne Victory match.
Can you introduce yourself and tell us about your football life?
My name is Fatima Yousufi. I am from Afghanistan and I am a 20 year old athlete that has played for the Afghanistan Women's National Football Team (AWNT) for almost six years. I started playing football in 2016 with some of my classmates, and I started playing professionally in 2017 for the U17 women's national team. When I started playing, all I knew about football was who Messi and Ronaldo were. I never knew that Afghanistan had a women's national team!
I just used some dribbling skills that I learned on TV and other girls were impressed. I was proud that I was doing the exact thing boys were doing. I never dreamt of playing soccer as a girl because I had this idea in my head that football is a game only for boys. This is also an opinion that the majority of people in my home country have.
Luckily, I had the help and support of my mother to find my courage and change the mindset of my father, relatives, and classmates. I also faced many other challenges across society and security issues. My dream felt almost unreachable, but I ended up having the honour to become the captain of the Afghanistan national team.
Currently, I am playing for Melbourne Victory after my country Afghanistan fell in August 2021. Over the past few years I have become a well known and high profile athlete in Afghanistan. When the Taliban took over it was enormously dangerous to me and my family to continue living there, as we were targets for the Taliban. It was impossible for me to continue my journey and again that dark age and old ideology came out. The Taliban banned women from not only playing sport but getting an education as well.
After Kabul fell, me and my teammates were able to evacuate safely to Australia with the help of the former captain of AWNT, Khalida Popal. As she based in Denmark, she organised to help our team with the support of amazing people such as the former captain of the Australian Men’s National Team Craig Foster, former Olympic swimmer Nikki Dryden, former goalkeeper coach of AWNT Haley Carter, former Australian Women’s player Moya Dodd, and lawyers Kat Craig and Alison Battisson.
What has your sports journey been like up until now?
Football has changed my life. It is not easy to reach your dreams but by working hard and believing in yourself you can achieve it. My journey has had lots of ups and downs, beautiful memories, and a lot of challenges, but I have learnt so much. The biggest lesson was and is the unity in our team. Together our bond is stronger than before.
One of the most dangerous moments I faced was the fall of Afghanistan. It was unbelievable, shocking, and I had never been in that situation before. I was scared and trying to survive. In the end we survived and we are able to fight for our dreams.
What did you try to capture with your photos? Was there a wider meaning?
All the photos were taken in different places in Melbourne and Sydney. In Sydney we had a leadership program where we trained with other Afghan refugee girls and my teammates Bahara Samimi and Mina Ahmadi. Bahara plays as a defender. Both of us were so excited to meet each other again after so many months and I gave her the Hummel kit of the national team.
While wearing our former national team jerseys, we were telling each other that it felt like we were in Tajikistan again, where we played our last competition as a national team before the Taliban took over the country.
There is a photo of Bahara and Mina smiling because they were telling stories about the old days, like when we played against the Tajikistan women’s U19 national team and one of our teammates was cheering out of happiness like a chicken after we scored a goal! Right now we have stories of the past but we are hoping to make stories in the future and to have our chance to play for Afghanistan again.
In Melbourne, I took some photos of us playing football, warming up before a game we won 11-0, getting to and from training by public transport, and also a training session with some of the coaches of Manchester United before they played a friendly against the Melbourne Victory men’s team in 2022. It was unbelievable to have the staff and coaches from Cristiano Ronaldo's team come and train us and also give us Manchester United jerseys as gifts!
When Melbourne Victory played the friendly game against Manchester United we were welcomed by the crowd at half time and I was able to talk to a crowd of 74,157 in the MCG (Melbourne Cricket Ground), one of the biggest and most beautiful stadiums in the world. I felt so honoured and proud when we entered the ground at the MCG. I felt the passion of the fans in the crowd and the happiness of my teammates.