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The Mad Master: Home Wide Angle

Mohammad Mofizuddin started a girls' football team at his school in 2011 despite facing criticism and discouragement. He worked hard to convince skeptical parents to allow their daughters to play. Though the girls and team faced ridicule and obstacles at first, their success in competitions helped change attitudes in the community. Now many of the girls trained by Mofizuddin play for Bangladesh's youth national teams and serve as inspirations for others.

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Rumana Fatima
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views6 pages

The Mad Master: Home Wide Angle

Mohammad Mofizuddin started a girls' football team at his school in 2011 despite facing criticism and discouragement. He worked hard to convince skeptical parents to allow their daughters to play. Though the girls and team faced ridicule and obstacles at first, their success in competitions helped change attitudes in the community. Now many of the girls trained by Mofizuddin play for Bangladesh's youth national teams and serve as inspirations for others.

Uploaded by

Rumana Fatima
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

11/26/2016

TheMadMaster|TheDailyStar

Home Wide Angle


12:00 AM, January 29, 2016 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:41 AM, January 29, 2016

The Mad Master


A mad man, a marriage destroyer and a master who is only capable of playing football with girls.
When Mohammad Mofizuddin of Kalsindur Government Primary School set out to form a girls'
football team back in 2011, he had no idea that he was going to be tagged with such phrases.

Anisur Rahman and Naimul Karim

For a brief period, the discouraging remarks had almost compelled him to quit preparing the girls for the
inaugural Bangamata Gold Cup five years ago -- a competition which his school went on to ace for two
consecutive years in 2013 and 2014.
Those few days were difficult, Mofizuddin says with a tinge of regret in his tone. They all just asked
the same question: why will girls play football? What's in it for them?

After coming across an advertisement of the Bangamata Gold Cup in 2011, Mofizuddin approached the
school's headmistress in a bid to participate in the competition. While the school authorities readily
agreed, taking part in the tournament though, as Mofizuddin later discovered, was going to be a lot
harder than it initially seemed.
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We barely found girls who wanted to play. It was a rather new concept for them. I had to force certain
sections to take part in the selection round.
Once we gathered 17 players, we had to then deal with their parents. Because most of them were
conservative, we had to work really hard to convince them.
There was this one guardian who blamed me for supposedly spoiling his niece's future. 'She runs
around outside all day. No one will marry her because of you,' he lamented. I told him that if she keeps
improving at this rate, she can get married anywhere she wants to, recalls Mofizuddin.
As time progressed, the practice sessions got a lot more serious. From merely kicking balls around
during the lunch breaks, the girls started attending post-school training sessions. But that's when several
other problems surfaced.

The girls weren't willing to wear half pants or three-quarters. They used to play wearing salwar kameez,
which made it difficult for them to run. It took them time to accept the jerseys.
In the midst of all this, there were ridiculous comments made against us. Once when I was going to
school in the morning, a couple of men pointed towards me and said, 'look there goes the master who
plays with the girls.'
There was this other time when the headmistress's son and I were watering the field after training. Two
people walked by and teased us. 'Look at those mad men. So this is what the madam's son is doing after
finishing his master's degree,' they taunted, adds Mofizuddin.
Sanjida Akter, who dazzled the nation during the AFC U-16 Championship Qualifiers in Dhaka, shares a
similar sentiment.
Once we got permission from our parents and started to play we thought it would be all fine. But there
were instances when our football was twice punctured by some people because the ball went over their
fence, she says.
It took some time, but the people living around the school at Dhobaura Upazila eventually did come
around.
We live in a backward region and most of the guardians either grow crops or pull rickshaws for their
living. But the support that we got from them eventually was really great.

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TheMadMaster|TheDailyStar

NATIONAL Players trained BY Mozuddin

Some of them came to practise in the evening and brought chocolates with them. One of them gave my
students free rides back home. The mentality changed a lot once we started winning games, says
Mofizuddin.
And win they did. After winning the Cups in 2013 and 2014, they are now favourites of completing a hattrick this year.
The main difference between the Kalsindur Government Primary School and the other institutions is
dedication, according to Mofizuddin.
Between 2011 and 2013, the girls trained every single day. It may sound like I am exaggerating, but
that's the truth. They were so determined that they even wanted to practise during the Eid holidays.
Once we started winning games, football became a source of inspiration for them. It turned out to be a
way for them to travel outside the Upazila, something that most of them couldn't think of doing, he says.
It was also a way for them to delay their marriage. I have a student Taslima who studies in class nine.
She trained under me in 2011. While her sister got married when in class four, Taslima still isn't married
and continues to play football in high school, Mofizuddin adds.
Today the school follows a strict six-day training schedule. As soon as class gets over, they pack their
bags, wear their jerseys and sweat it out for two hours in the afternoon.
It's something that their teachers, all of whom have earned plenty of respect around the country because
of them, encourage them to do.
To his credit, Mofizuddin recently completed a course with the Bangladesh Football Federation and plans
to further develop his training sessions.
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TheMadMaster|TheDailyStar

I myself learnt a lot and it helps as well. Just the other day my current primary school girls team
defeated the boys 2-0 and this is nothing new. The boys don't receive any training and some of the senior
boys actually complain about that, reveals Mofizuddin.

NATIONAL Players trained BY Mozuddin

The other aspect that has helped them out is funding. They received timely financial help from various
people in the region before every tournament. While the amount doesn't always necessarily cover the
entire cost of the trip, it helps them tremendously.
The good thing is that we have managed to develop a sense of liking for the game over here. In 2011, I
struggled to find 17 students. Today, I have plenty of interested girls, but I don't have the means to train
them all. We need more assistance.
The students here know that if they do well, they can earn plenty of respect because they have seen
their seniors earn that. For example, Sanjida Akter played under me in 2011.
Today she plays for the national team and the chairman of the Upazila invites her father over for tea
every now and then. This is something that Sanjida could not have even imagined before, explains
Mofizuddin.
If Sanjida was Bangladesh's heroine in the AFC U-16 championship in 2014, then it was Marzia, another
student from the Kalsindur Primary School, who led Bangladesh Under-14 to their historic AFC U-14
championship in Nepal in December. Her strike led Bangladesh to a 1-0 victory over the hosts.
There are many other students from this school who are representing the different levels of Bangladesh's
women's football teams today.
A move that was initially feared and expected to spoil the future of these girls has gone on to become a
lifeline for these young footballers, for it is through this means that many of them now yearn to achieve
the dreams that previously seemed light years away.
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TheMadMaster|TheDailyStar

Mozuddin
directing
his players
from the
sidelines
during a
match.
Photo:
Munir Uz
Zaman/AFP

THE DREAMER
Mohammad Mofizuddin, 40, has been teaching various subjects at Kalsindur Government Primary
School since 1999. An active football player back in his days, it was his dream to be able to use the
beautiful game in order to help his students. That opportunity came in 2011 when he spotted an
advertisement of the Bangamata Gold Cup. Today, 11 players trained by him represent Bangladesh at
different levels and the astonishing fact is that Mofizuddin never received any sort of coaching classes
prior to 2015. He just has one aim: I want my girls to do what I couldn't. Represent their nation through
football.

Copyright:
Any unauthorized use or reproduction of The Daily Star content for commercial purposes is strictly
prohibited and constitutes copyright infringement liable to legal action.

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TheMadMaster|TheDailyStar

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