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Michigan Post > Blog > World > How basketball is giving kids in South Sudan hope for the long run
World

How basketball is giving kids in South Sudan hope for the long run

By Editorial Board Published September 7, 2025 10 Min Read
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How basketball is giving kids in South Sudan hope for the long run

The world’s youngest nation is banking on its younger individuals to propel its nationwide id past the spectre of battle, by hope, perseverance and a love of basketball.

At 14 years outdated, budding basketball athlete Peter Oja is similar age as his nation.

He was born the 12 months South Sudan voted for independence from Sudan, after a decades-long liberation battle that turned one in every of Africa’s longest civil wars.

The South Sudanese battle for self-determination and freedom has shifted to a battle to stabilise and form their new nation.

Picture:
Peter Oja

Peter and different gamers are a part of a brand new era that’s transferring away from the streets and the frontlines and spending all their free time coaching on the basketball courtroom.

“It is about consistency every single day. It is how our coaches teach us over there. They come in and practice with us and give us some discipline,” Peter tells us within the yard of his small dwelling in South Sudan’s capital, Juba.

“They tell us to focus on the things that you will be able to control, so you have to practice really hard and do your thing and everything will work out. It is about teamwork and love for each other.”

We ask to see Peter’s trophies, and he emerges from his room along with his neck heavy with medals and fingers stuffed with golden statuettes. The oldest trophy was awarded to him by the Luol Deng Basis at solely six years outdated.

Teenagers playing basketball at a court built by the Loul Deng Foundation

Picture:
Youngsters enjoying basketball at a courtroom constructed by the Loul Deng Basis

The inspiration began by South Sudanese-British NBA All-Star Luol Deng runs the coaching camps which have stored Peter engaged and decided since he was just a bit boy.

Peter’s mom, Sarah, watches on proudly. She is a single father or mother who helps him and his youthful siblings by unsteady work, and hopes that basketball will assist him win a college scholarship and finally deliver all of them out of poverty.

That prospect will not be far-fetched. South Sudanese basketball participant Kamaan Maluaach was the tenth total choose within the 2025 NBA draft after getting his begin at a Luol Deng coaching camp in Uganda as a teenage refugee.

“I am hoping Peter will succeed in basketball and rise to the top so that he can even support me one day,” says Sarah as he watches on with a smile.

Sarah Oja hopes that basketball will help her son win a university scholarship

Picture:
Sarah Oja hopes that basketball will assist her son win a college scholarship

A brief stroll from Peter’s dwelling, we communicate to his coach, Tony, about what the basketball coaching means for younger girls and boys.

“It is like therapy. It is healing for the kids. That is why we are with them. Most of these kids, including us, grew up in the war,” says Tony.

We’re sitting on a bench watching younger individuals prepare on the courtroom on the College of Juba, constructed by the Luol Deng Basis and named after Manute Bol, the primary South Sudanese basketball athlete to play for the NBA.

Teenagers training with coach Tony at the Luol Deng Foundation court

Picture:
Youngsters coaching with coach Tony on the Luol Deng Basis courtroom

Tony has been teaching children on Manute Bol courtroom because it opened in 2015.

“We are trying to take the kids from staying idle and doing nothing – that is how they get involved with gangs, drugs and so on,” he says.

“Come and practice, come and be with us, come and have that extra time from school playing basketball or any other sport activities.”

Coach Tony tells Yousra Elbagir that basketball is 'like therapy' for the children

Picture:
Coach Tony tells Yousra Elbagir that basketball is ‘like remedy’ for the kids

Lately, South Sudan’s nationwide groups have gained critical traction internationally.

Within the 2024 Paris Olympics, South Sudan’s males’s workforce performed a traditionally shut sport towards a US nationwide workforce brimming with NBA stars like LeBron James and Kevin Durant.

In July, South Sudan’s ladies’s workforce made a victorious debut on the continental championship, AfroBasket, successful a bronze medal.

People watch South Sudan's men's national basketball team competing in the continental AfroBasket championship

Picture:
Folks watch South Sudan’s males’s nationwide basketball workforce competing within the continental AfroBasket championship

Luol Deng has been steering the nationwide groups as head of the South Sudan Basketball Federation and coach of the lads’s workforce. His Deng Academy has been working for a decade, launching these youth coaching camps in Juba in 2015.

Two years earlier, civil battle broke out in South Sudan throughout tribal strains for management of the brand new nation. Ultimately, armed violence reached Manute Bol’s courtroom.

Peter shows off his many basketball trophies

Picture:
Peter exhibits off his many basketball trophies

“I remember the time when we were practising there inside the Luol Deng Foundation and then guns began to happen,” says Peter.

“They locked us inside and told us not to go out. It is kind of a risk for you as a kid. You can’t be happy when you see guns. You are in fear.”

Children playing on a court built by the Luol Deng Foundation

Picture:
Kids enjoying on a courtroom constructed by the Luol Deng Basis

The political chaos exterior the courtroom continues to affect younger gamers on the courtroom.

A 2018 peace deal that stabilised South Sudan is now susceptible to falling aside as battle continues within the north. Opposition chief and vice chairman Riek Machar and his spouse, the minister of inside, Angelina Teny, have been held below home arrest since March in a violation of the peace settlement that threatens to return the nation to all-out civil battle.

Past inside fragmentation and widespread corruption, South Sudan’s authorities is scrambling to win factors geopolitically by receiving prison deportees from the US after the Trump administration revoked all US visas of South Sudanese residents in April.

South Sudanese teenagers work hard for their dream of becoming a basketball star

Picture:
South Sudanese youngsters work laborious for his or her dream of turning into a basketball star

The banning of US visas has damage alternatives for younger individuals dreaming of an NBA draft.

“It really came to light when a couple of young people who had got approved for their visas and had their tickets were about to fly out and were impacted that week of the decision coming out,” says Arek Deng, Luol’s sister and the chief government of the Luol Deng Basis.

“They were stopped at the Juba International airport, and they couldn’t fly out. One was a female, one was a male, and they were going to high school. They were excited, and I’m sure families have put in their life savings to make sure that they fly out.”

Arek Deng, Luol's sister and the CEO of the Luol Deng Foundation

Picture:
Arek Deng, Luol’s sister and the CEO of the Luol Deng Basis

As a former worldwide basketball athlete, Arek feels the ache of their disappointment. She performed for the Nice Britain Girls’s Nationwide Staff and the College of Delaware as a scholar.

She now runs the inspiration on the bottom with Luol and their brother Deng. The little exterior help they obtained by the US Company for Worldwide Improvement (USAID) has ended.

“The USAID cuts have affected us in the sense that what we did outside of Juba, especially in Wau and in other areas and doing residential camps that open up more than just basketball. The funding for that stopped and then it means that you have to make some people redundant in the organisation,” she says.

“We don’t have any donors currently. For a long time now, it’s been Luol that is funding the foundation in every way that we can. We will have joint initiatives here and there.”

Regardless of the dearth of funding help, the coaching camps stay open to all. Kids as younger as six years outdated are enthusiastically dribbling the ball, behind Arek on the brightly colored tiles of Manute Bol courtroom.

“It is hard to turn them away because the alternatives are not very good. If you turn them away, what are they going to do? Be in the streets?” asks Arek.

“It is also a good way for the older ones to take care of their younger siblings. They bring them here and so we cannot turn them away.”

TAGGED:BasketballchildrenfuturegivinghopeSouthSudan
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