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Rashid Olympics Closes Summer with Championship Soccer Match

Rashid Olympics Closes Summer with Championship Soccer Match    
Saturday, 27 September 2008
By Staff Sgt. Brent Williams and Sgt. David Hodge
4th Infantry Division

An Iraqi soccer player from the community of Abu T'shir tries to maneuver past a defender from the Risalah community during the championship soccer match for the Rashid Olympics Sept. 9, 2008 at the Jaza'ir Oil Refinery soccer field in the Rashid district of southern Baghdad.  Photo by Staff Sgt. Brent Williams, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

An Iraqi soccer player from the community of Abu T’shir tries to maneuver past a defender from the Risalah community during the championship soccer match for the Rashid Olympics Sept. 9, 2008 at the Jaza’ir Oil Refinery soccer field in the Rashid district of southern Baghdad. Photo by Staff Sgt. Brent Williams, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

BAGHDAD

— The Rashid Olympics in southern Baghdad came to as end as more than 330 teams from 14 neighborhoods competed in friendly soccer games spanning the course of the summer. The Rashid District Sports and Youth Committee hosted the championship soccer match and closing ceremony Sept. 9, at the Jaza’ir Oil Refinery soccer field to pit the champions of the East and West Rashid beladiyats against each other in the contest to crown a winner and relish the success of the district’s first sports program since the war began.

A team from eastern Rashid Abu T’shir earned a hard-fought 3-1 victory over the team from Risalah in a spirited match during the championship game that represented the zenith of more than four months of youth soccer throughout the summer.

Hard work from volunteers, coaches and all the neighborhoods in the district took care of thousands of kids competing throughout the tournament, said Lt. Col. Dave Hill, commander, 1st Special Troops Battalion, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad.

Events like these are the cornerstone of Iraq’s future, said Maj. Joe Berthelotte, brigade information officer assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, 1st BCT, 4th Inf. Div.

“The people of Rashid are returning to a sense of normalcy,” said Berthelotte, who hails from Nashua, N.H. “Children are afforded the enjoyment of a childhood – uninterrupted by the violence that was once prevalent in southern Baghdad. Events such as these are the cornerstone of Iraq’s future.”

Capt. Thao Reed worked as the special projects manager for the Rashid Olympics and served in an advisory capacity for the project, which engaged approximately 10,000 Iraqi boys and girls. Reed is the commander of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st STB, 1st BCT, 4th Inf. Div.

Reed, who is a native of Fort Worth, Texas, said she believes the project empowered the local Iraqi governance to help return a sense of normalcy to the neighborhoods and communities of Baghdad.

“When children are playing sports, there is an implied situation that means security is present – the reality of kids playing, letting our kids play on the ground, play on the streets – provides the youth and the Iraqi family a sense of normalcy,” said Reed.

The Rashid Olympics served a two-fold purpose: to engage the youth, and to get the local governance involved with the Iraqi people to provide a viable, sustainable community service provided by the local government, explained Reed.

Coalition forces, working with the U.S. State Department, also provided some resources to make the soccer tournament a success, such as providing the uniforms and soccer balls for the ongoing program to help encourage youth participation in the community program.

U.S. Engineers renovated 14 soccer fields and are constructing two gymnasiums in Rashid, added Reed.