Skateistan opens Afghanistan's first indoor skate park | Cameron Sinclair
1. Skateistan opens Afghanistan's first indoor skate
park | Cameron Sinclair
In pages and pages of press about what's going wrong in Afghanistan emerges a story of hope. Last
Thursday marked the official opening of the Skateistan skate park, Kabuls' largest indoor sports
facility. Two years in the making, this center is a testament to a group of national and international
idealistic individuals who believe in the power of sports to create social change.
Founded in 2007 by three Australians, Skateistan is the world's first co-ed skateboarding school. The
school engages urban and internally-displaced youth through skateboarding, and provides them with
new opportunities in cross-cultural interaction, education, and personal empowerment programs.
The students are selected from all of Afghanistan's diverse ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds.
They develop skills in skateboarding, skateboarding instruction, healthy habits, civic responsibility,
information technology, the arts, and languages.
As stories of the fledgling organization
began to spread a bold idea emerged --
what if we build a safe center for kids
from all over Kabul to come together.
The Skateistan team worked day and
night to bring together an open
coalition seeking to put an anchor in
the ground -- to build a place the
organization can call home.
The center, now open, was funded by a
coalition of funders including the
governments of Norway, Denmark, Germany and Canada, dozens of skater-related fundraisers
around the world and a grant from Nike Gamechangers and Architecture for Humanity.
At the opening around 100 skaters from Afghanistan, who have been taught by the Skateistan
teachers, showed off their new skills. They were joined by professionals from the Netherlands, Syria
and the United States