Ukrainian refugees in club sports – “We experience great commitment and great openness”

A child is balancing on a bench, in the background other children are swinging on ropes during children's gymnastics.

The corona crisis is becoming a balancing act for clubs and associations: Without events and sponsors, money is tight. (imago / Joker / Petra Steuer)
Felix Kuhaupt is the contact person in the State Sports Association of Rhineland-Palatinate when it comes to integration in sport goes. Clubs can contact the State Sports Association with practical questions about insurance cover or the status of foreigners. This offers advice or arranges contact persons for the clubs.

The sports structures are good – with a nationwide club landscape everywhere, emphasized Kuhaupt. “You can also find a sports club in the small towns where people arrive. Actually, everyone can take part in the offer, the clubs are also very open.” The language is one of the biggest hurdles. But the most important thing is finding each other.

The state sports association has theirs Sports guide for refugees in Ukrainian translate. “How is an association structured? What is volunteer work? Who are the people who make the offer in the association? What kind of construct is it that you enter?” Also, there is a FAQ with the frequently asked questions about measures and aid projects in the context of refugees in sport.

Differences to 2015/16

During the refugee situation in 2015/2016, many refugees were housed in shelters, which a sports club could turn to selectively. Now it’s spreading. “Many people have made their private premises available. Inquiries at the Ministry of Integration have come to nothing because they said we have to wait until the municipalities report who has registered with them,” reports Kuhaupt.

On-site help is of course always dependent on the people on site. “The club as such defines itself as a place that should be accessible to everyone. That’s where people’s initiative is needed. We see a lot of commitment and a lot of openness there.”

As an example, Kuhaupt named a club from Mainz that advertised its offer with flyers in Ukrainian at an early stage and thus approached people aggressively. But Ukrainians don’t just come to the clubs to do sports: In a small gymnastics club in Wallertheim, a Ukrainian trainer offers rhythmic gymnastics – an offer that hasn’t existed for 20 years because nobody could teach it.

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