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5 for Good: AmeriCorps volunteer workers help Guinean migrants connect through soccer

AmeriCorps partners with Boston Healthcare for the Homeless to serve asylum seekers

5 for Good: AmeriCorps volunteer workers help Guinean migrants connect through soccer

AmeriCorps partners with Boston Healthcare for the Homeless to serve asylum seekers

CONNECTIONS THROUGH SPORT. EVEN ON A SWELTERING DAY, THESE TWO MAKE JUGGLING ON THE COMMON LOOK EFFORTLESS, AND YOU CAN SEE THE JOY IN THEIR HOME COUNTRY OF GUINEA. SOCCER IS JUST PART OF LIFE. IF YOU WANT TO HAVE SOME FRIENDS, IF YOU WANT TO PLAY WITH YOUR FRIENDS, YOU HAVE TO PLAY SOCCER. 25 YEAR OLD MAMADOU AND 19 YEAR OLD AL-SAADI HAVE ONLY KNOWN EACH OTHER FOR A FEW MONTHS, BUT SHARE VERY SIMILAR STORIES. BOTH FLED GUINEA, FLEW TO GUATEMALA AND THEN MADE IT TO THE U.S. BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY. I WORK AND TAKE THE BUS. YOU TOOK BUSSES? YEAH. AND YOU WALKED? YEAH. SOMETIMES HORSES. HORSES? YEAH. I CANNOT IMAGINE THAT JOURNEY. YEAH. IN MEXICO, THE MAFIA, THEY CATCH US, TAKE OUR MONEY AND PHONES AND EVERYTHING. IT WAS HARD. A MILITARY COUP IN GUINEA IN 2021 RESULTED IN ONGOING ETHNIC AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE. BOTH SAY THEY FEARED FOR THEIR LIVES. EVEN MAMADOU, A SWIMMER WHO REPRESENTED GUINEA AT THE 2021 OLYMPIC GAMES USA, IS THE BEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD. THERE ARE A LOT OF OPPORTUNITIES THAT CAN HELP YOUNG PEOPLE THAT HAVE LIKE, UH, A GOAL TO ACHIEVE WITHOUT ANY RESOURCES OF THEIR OWN. BOTH FOUND COMPASSION AND CARE IN BOSTON, TWO WOMEN IN PARTICULAR, EXTENDING KINDNESS. MY FAMILY MIGRATED HERE FROM COLOMBIA. UM ABOUT TEN YEARS AGO, AND I IT’S JUST ALWAYS WHAT I’VE BEEN DRAWN TO IS GOING BACK AND HELPING THAT COMMUNITY SPECIFICALLY MANUELA AND MAURA QUINN ARE AMERICORPS VOLUNTEERS PARTNERED WITH BOSTON HEALTH CARE FOR THE HOMELESS. THEY WORK WITH DOCTORS, INCLUDING ARA OBANDO. HOW ARE YOU DOING? SHE RUNS A MEDICAL CLINIC INSIDE THE YOUTH SHELTER AT BRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATERS. I WORK CLOSELY WITH MANUELA AND MAURA IN MEDICAL CASE MANAGEMENT AND SUPPORTING OUR PATIENTS AND ALL THE SOCIAL DRIVERS OF HEALTH. SO FOR INSTANCE, LIKE FOOD INSECURITY, ACCESS TO TRANSPORTATION AND CLOTHING, FINDING LEGAL HELP, SECURING WORK PAPERS AND SCHOOL PLACEMENT ARE ALL CHALLENGES. THEY HELP WITH THE NEED IS PROFOUND. MANY OF THESE PATIENTS OF OURS, THEY ARE FLEEING DANGEROUS SITUATIONS IN THEIR HOME COUNTRIES AND SO CARRY A LOT OF TRAUMA FROM THAT. BUT THEN THERE’S ALSO THE TRAUMA OF ACCULTURATION AND LEARNING HOW TO NAVIGATE A NEW SPACE IN A LANGUAGE THAT’S NOT THEIR OWN, AND THEN FEELING ISOLATED BECAUSE THEY’VE LEFT, IN MANY CASES, THEIR LOVED ONES BEHIND. AND SO BUILDING COMMUNITY IS SUPER IMPORTANT. AND WITH THAT, IN MIND, MAURA AND MANUELA WERE ABLE TO CONNECT MAMADOU ALLSTON AND OTHERS WITH A SOCCER LEAGUE AND WE BROUGHT THEM TO SOCCER PRACTICE IN JANUARY AND IT JUST TOOK OFF. THEY KEPT GOING EVERY WEEK AND THEY LOVED IT. UM, THE SOCCER TEAM IS A REALLY A GREAT, PRODUCTIVE WAY FOR THEM TO SPEND THEIR TIME, GREAT FOR THEIR MENTAL HEALTH, GREAT FOR THEIR PHYSICAL HEALTH. AL CINDY NOW CAPTAINS AN ENTIRE TEAM OF PLAYERS FROM GUINEA. THEY WILL COMPETE IN THE BOSTON UNITY CUP THIS SUMMER. IT’S, UH, MAKING ME SO HAPPY. YOU KNOW? AND YOU’RE THE CAPTAIN? YEAH, OF THE TEAM. THE TEAM GUINEA. YEAH. WHEN YOU SEE PEOPLE THAT SPEAK THE SAME LANGUAGE AS YOU AND, UH, KNOW WHAT YOU’RE GOING THROUGH, LET’S HELP YOU TO RECOVER JUST A LITTLE BIT. IT HELPS RECOVER JUST A LITTLE BIT. BOTH YOUNG MEN, THEY’RE DETERMINED TO SUCCEED. MAMADOU. HE’S NOT COMPETING IN THE TOURNAMENT TO FOCUS ON CLASSES. HE’S TAKING CLASSES AT ROXBURY COMMUNITY COLLEGE. ALLSTON ENROLLS IN HIGH SCHOOL TH
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5 for Good: AmeriCorps volunteer workers help Guinean migrants connect through soccer

AmeriCorps partners with Boston Healthcare for the Homeless to serve asylum seekers

Migrants from Guinea, 25-year-old Mamadou and 19-year-old Alseny, have only known each other for a few months, but they share similar stories.Both young men flew from Guinea to Guatemala and then traveled to the United States by any means necessary."I walk(ed) and took the bus,” Alseny said."Sometimes horses,” Mamadou added. “It was hard. In Mexico, the mafia, they took our money and phones and everything."A military coup in Guinea in 2021 resulted in ongoing ethnic and political violence. Both young men said they feared for their lives."USA is the best country in the world,” Mamadou said. “There are a lot of opportunities that can help young people that have a goal to achieve."Without any resources of their own, both said they found compassion and care in Boston. They said two women in particular extended kindness.Manuela Arroyav and Mara Quinn are AmeriCorps volunteers partnered with Boston Healthcare for the Homeless. They work with doctors, including Aura Obando, who runs a medical clinic inside the youth shelter at Bridge over Troubled Waters."I work closely with Manuela and Mara in medical case management and supporting our patients,” Obando said. “So, for instance, food insecurity, access to transportation and clothing, help navigating a pharmacy, things like that."Obando said securing legal help, work papers, and school placements are all tasks Arroyav and Quinn help with."The need is profound,” she said. "Many of these patients of ours, they are fleeing dangerous situations in their home countries, and so they carry a lot of trauma from that, but then there's also the trauma of acculturation and learning how to navigate a new space in a language that's not their own, and then feeling isolated because they've left in many cases their loved ones behind, and so building community is super important."With that in mind, Arroyav and Quinn connected Mamadou, Alseny, and others with a Boston-based soccer league. In Guinea, soccer is part of life."If you want to have some friends, you have to play soccer," Mamadou said."We brought them to soccer practice in January, and it just took off,” Quinn said. “They kept going every week. They loved it. The soccer team is a really great, productive way for them to spend their time. (It’s) great for their mental health, great for their physical health.”Alseny now captains a team of players from Guinea set to compete in the Boston Unity Cup this summer."When you see people that speak the same language as you and know what you are going through, that helps you to recover just a little bit," Mamadou said.

Migrants from Guinea, 25-year-old Mamadou and 19-year-old Alseny, have only known each other for a few months, but they share similar stories.

Both young men flew from Guinea to Guatemala and then traveled to the United States by any means necessary.

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"I walk(ed) and took the bus,” Alseny said.

"Sometimes horses,” Mamadou added. “It was hard. In Mexico, the mafia, they took our money and phones and everything."

A military coup in Guinea in 2021 resulted in ongoing ethnic and political violence. Both young men said they feared for their lives.

"USA is the best country in the world,” Mamadou said. “There are a lot of opportunities that can help young people that have a goal to achieve."

Without any resources of their own, both said they found compassion and care in Boston. They said two women in particular extended kindness.

Manuela Arroyav and Mara Quinn are AmeriCorps volunteers partnered with Boston Healthcare for the Homeless. They work with doctors, including Aura Obando, who runs a medical clinic inside the youth shelter at Bridge over Troubled Waters.

"I work closely with Manuela and Mara in medical case management and supporting our patients,” Obando said. “So, for instance, food insecurity, access to transportation and clothing, help navigating a pharmacy, things like that."

Obando said securing legal help, work papers, and school placements are all tasks Arroyav and Quinn help with.

"The need is profound,” she said. "Many of these patients of ours, they are fleeing dangerous situations in their home countries, and so they carry a lot of trauma from that, but then there's also the trauma of acculturation and learning how to navigate a new space in a language that's not their own, and then feeling isolated because they've left in many cases their loved ones behind, and so building community is super important."

With that in mind, Arroyav and Quinn connected Mamadou, Alseny, and others with a Boston-based soccer league. In Guinea, soccer is part of life.

"If you want to have some friends, you have to play soccer," Mamadou said.

"We brought them to soccer practice in January, and it just took off,” Quinn said. “They kept going every week. They loved it. The soccer team is a really great, productive way for them to spend their time. (It’s) great for their mental health, great for their physical health.”

Alseny now captains a team of players from Guinea set to compete in the Boston Unity Cup this summer.

"When you see people that speak the same language as you and know what you are going through, that helps you to recover just a little bit," Mamadou said.