When the world cup came to Chalco, children, football and solidarity across borders
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When the world cup came to Chalco, children, football and solidarity across borders

Key Takeaways

  • Children between 7 and 14 years old take part in a football tournament in Chalco, representing countries including Palestine, Haiti, Sudan, Mexico, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Greece and Lebanon.
  • The event connects football with messages about war, displacement, migration, resilience and solidarity shared before matches.
  • Families, teachers and Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams participate through matches, health information, art activities and community engagement.
  • The article highlights local challenges in Chalco, including access to healthcare, limited public services and limited recreational opportunities.
  • The tournament centres children’s experience of representing places beyond their daily horizons while playing in their own neighbourhood.

A neighbourhood world cup in Chalco

Palestine, Haiti, Sudan, Mexico and the Democratic Republic of Congo begin their warm-up exercises under the sun. Outside the field, Greece and Lebanon are finishing registration before the opening ceremony. Children between 7 and 14 years old run onto the pitch, excited and ready to play in the Chalco neighbourhood world cup, a tournament representing countries they had rarely, if ever, heard about before. They will not be playing at the Azteca Stadium, nor in Los Angeles, Toronto or New York. Instead, they will compete in their own neighbourhood, Chalco.

Opening speech at the world cup hosted at Chalco
Opening speech by the MSF team, accompanied by the community leaders who were vital to making this tournament happen.
Alejandra Tapia/MSF

Local perspective from the sidelines

Roberto, a parent, watching his son play for Lebanon, says, “My son is playing for Lebanon, wearing red. Of course, I’ve heard of the country, but I don’t know much beyond what appears in the news. It’s fun to see the kids representing countries that may not be football powerhouses, but are still fighting their own battles.”

Before each match, the referee explains the usual rules of a friendly tournament: no sliding tackles, no rough challenges; we are here to have fun and play.

Warm up before the match in Chalco
A trainer was called to help the kids warm up before and during the matches, with those not actively playing in those moments. 
Alejandra Tapia/MSF

Event Introduction read before the match, representing Palestine

Then comes a less familiar introduction.

“Today we represent Palestine, a country that has endured the devastating effects of a brutal war affecting millions of people,” I read into the microphone the referee has just handed me. For a moment, I wonder whether it might be too much information for children. Perhaps suffering thousands of kilometres away feels less distant in a place where hardship is also part of everyday life. Still, I continue: “At Doctors Without Borders, we witness the resilience of the Palestinian people every day. More than 1,700 staff members continue providing emergency medical care despite extraordinary challenges. Today, Palestine represents a team that shows solidarity is more than words. It is the decision to care for others, even in the most difficult moments.”

Similar messages accompany the other teams: the taro leaf as a symbol of identity for the Rohingya in Bangladesh; neighbors in Ukraine supporting older people through the hardships of war; the migration journeys of people from Haiti and Venezuela; forced displacement and community-led support networks in Sudan; the experiences of those crossing the Mediterranean; and the courage required to maintain a sense of normal life in the Democratic Republic of Congo. There is no applause after these introductions, but there is a respectful silence, even among the children, that acknowledges these realities from this small football field.

A group of children representing Lebanon and Sudan in the world cup game in Chalco
A group of children representing Lebanon and Sudan. Before the matches, the MSF team spoke to the attendees about the crises in these countries to raise awareness. 
Alejandra Tapia/MSF

Football, healthcare and everyday life in Chalco

Families cheer from the sidelines as the matches begin. Eleven-year-old Juan watches from behind the fence in his Haiti jersey, waiting for his turn to step onto the field.

Juan, Participant, speaking about access to treatment, “I broke my arm last year. We had to travel almost two hours and wait a long time before I could get treatment. We didn’t know about MSF then, but now we know they’re here in the neighbourhood.”

He proudly shows the scar on his arm, displaying it almost like a trophy.

Access to healthcare, along with many other essential services, remains a challenge in Chalco. Large sections of the municipality still lack paved roads and drainage systems. Opportunities for recreational activities are limited, but community engagement is not.

Children are playing before the official start of the tournament, at the world cup hosted at Chalco
Children are playing before the official start of the tournament. 
Alejandra Tapia/MSF

The role of schools, sport and community participation

“When we learned MSF was coming, we knew we had to involve the schools,” says teacher Víctor Ortiz, who helped bring together more than 60 children for the event alongside the project’s health promotion teams. “Sport is a fundamental tool for transforming our country. We face difficult circumstances here, and sport and culture are among the best ways to confront them.”

Around the field, other activities unfold throughout the day. Health promotion teams share information with parents about available services and clinic locations, while younger children colour football-themed mandalas. In another corner, dozens of hands work together on a large mural where children express their interests, dreams, concerns and aspirations. The variety of characters painted across the banner reflects what a shared community space can look like. Nearby, the foosball tables generate cheers almost as loud as those coming from the matches themselves.

Match results and what lasts beyond the score

Haiti wins its match against Sudan in a penalty shootout. Lebanon scores five against Bangladesh. Still, in the end, none of that really matters.

The children may not remember every context or every statistic. What they may remember is the day they played as part of a team different from their school or neighbourhood. They may remember representing countries that exist far beyond their daily horizons, places where children just like them also chase a football, regardless of the circumstances around them. Most of all, they may remember the day the World Cup came to Chalco, and they were the ones at the centre of it.

When the world cup came to Chalco, children, football and solidarity across borders
A pic of all the participants in Football for All. 
Alejandra Tapia/MSF