Tag Archives: peaceplayers international – cyprus

A father’s dream: Sevki Pirlanta works toward a peaceful future for his children

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PPI-Cyprus coach and father Sevki Pirlanta with his family in Cyprus

The following post is adapted from an article printed in the October 2010 edition of InthePaint Magazine. Written by former PPI-Cyprus Fellow, Adam Hirsch, the article highlights PeacePlayers-Cyprus coach Sevki Pirlanta’s involvement with the program and the opportunity PPI has given him to create a better and more peaceful future for his son. In honor of Father’s Day, Sevki’s story reiterates what it means to be a father who will do anything to make the world a better place for his children. 

As the sun begins to drift slowly toward the horizon, Coach Sevki Pirlanta drives his dusty green truck through the town’s narrow streets. “In the village, you need to be good at many things,” he says, “If a pipe breaks or a house needs painting, you cannot always get someone else to do it.”

Sevki likes that self reliance. It’s the one reason he moved to Iskele 13 years ago after graduating from a university in Famagusta, the regional capital. He landed a job at a local primary school and soon decided to start his own basketball program. “I played many sports,” Sevki says, as he pulls up to the town’s athletic center, “but I was particularly drawn to the game of basketball due to its fast pace and because it was new.”

Kids begin running up to Sevki’s car, excited to see their coach arrive. While he played basketball as a young man, a severe knee injury cut short his playing career. Coaching kept him connected to the game. His program started slowly, but soon kids from all over the village joined, including his own son, Cetin. When asked if Cetin gets special privileges for being the coach’s son, Sevki laughs and says, “I’m always pushing him harder than the other kids.”

Pirlanka instructs PeacePlayers participants in Cyprus

Pirlanta instructs PeacePlayers participants in Cyprus

Cetin doesn’t seem to mind: He’s the last one in the gym after every practice, putting up some final shots, collecting the balls and turning out the lights. “Cetin is one of the main reasons I decided to join PeacePlayers,” Sevki says. The coach was introduced to PeacePlayers only a few years after starting his own program, as PeacePlayers was just getting started in Cyprus. Today, the organization has about 150 regular Cypriot participants in its year-round basketball program, which brings together Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot children from across the island’s 35-year-old division for integrated games and activities.

“One of the things that drew me to PleacePlayers was my own past,” Sevki says, “I don’t want my son to go through the same things I had to deal with growing up.”

Sevki was born in Paphos, in the island’s south, but left when he was only 3 years old to escape fighting in the region. In 1974, Sevki’s family joined thousands of others—Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot—driven from their ancestral homes to the newly homogenous north and south of the island. His family settled in Famagusta, now an entirely Turkish Cypriot city, just to the north of the “buffer zone.”

Sevki never liked to talk about his involvement in the bloody conflict, but missing his pinky finger was a constant reminder. In 2003, after the border between the communities opened for crossings, Sevki’s father received some unexpected visitors—his best friends from before the war, Greek Cypriots, who had traveled across the island to reconnect. After 30 years with no communication, the friends ate dinner together.

Sevki’s father later told him that there had been times when he and his friends were fighting on opposite sides of the conflict, possibly shooting at each other. “How is it possible that during the years of fighting and conflict you did not kill each other?” Sevki asked. His father responded, “Because we love.”

But even after the meeting with his Greek Cypriot friends, Sevki’s father remained skeptical, uncomfortable with his son’s decision to work with a bicommunal organization like PeacePlayers. Sevki patiently explained that he wanted a different future for his children. “We have to help the future through peace.”

After two hours of drills and scrimmages, Sevki begins to wrap up practice. His team sits on the sidelines, panting and covered in sweat, with big smiles across their faces. Sevki tells them that this weekend they will play the Greek-Cypriot children from the village of Agros. Some of the children are nervous, but most are excited. Only a few years ago this would have been impossible. The sun has set, and Sevki pulls his dusty green truck out of the gym’s parking lot. He waves goodbye to his kids and looks in the rear view mirror, at his own son sitting in the back seat. He remembers something his grandfather would tell him when he was a boy: “I help everyone. Language, religion are not important, the only thing that matters is that we are all human.”

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International Fellowships offer Americans unique opportunity to bridge divides, bring peace

South Africa International Fellow, Kristin Degou, during a basketball practice with her PeacePlayers team

South Africa International Fellow, Kristin Degou, during a basketball practice with her PeacePlayers team

While every individual involved in PeacePlayers is absolutely necessary, the 75 international fellows who have volunteered at each of the PPI sites since 2001 are an integral part of the PPI program. PPI’s International Fellowship program offers outstanding post-collegiate scholar athletes the opportunity to serve two year terms in any of the PPI sites: Northern Ireland, South Africa, the Middle East, or Cyprus. PPI Fellows provide basketball expertise to the children involved in the program, serve as mentors and role models, and act as neutral facilitators between PPI coaches and participants.

Megan Houlihan with a group of PeacePlayers in Northern Ireland

Megan Houlihan with a group of PeacePlayers in Northern Ireland

While each fellow must fulfill the expectations of the program, some join PPI already interested in a certain aspect of the organization’s mission. Megan Houlihan of New York joined the PPI family in 2010, when she worked as an International Fellow at PPI’s Northern Ireland site. One of her main goals for her time in Ireland was to inspire young girls in the area. “I really believe that involvement in sport allows young girls to develop a sense of self-confidence and assertiveness,” she said. “On a larger scale, that can play into the integral role women have in achieving peace in conflict situations.”

In addition to acting as a mentor, role model, and facilitator to the different groups involved in PPI, many International Fellows go above and beyond to immerse themselves in the divided communities in which they are working. Adam Hirsch worked as an International Fellow at PPI’s Cyprus site from 2010-2012. While in Cyprus, Adam organized 3 mural projects at disadvantaged schools. One of these projects was for the children of Agios Antonios Elementary School in Limassol. Agios Antonios is very unique in that it is one of a handful of schools in Cyprus that has students of Greek-Cypriot, Turkish-Cypriot, and Roma descent. The murals depicted the key elements of the PeacePlayers mission: hope, peace, and of course, basketball. Adam said of the project, “The finished product was more than just something nice to look at; it was something the kids could see every day and be proud of, showing the world just how much potential they have if given an opportunity.”

International Fellow, Adam Hirsch, in front of the mural at Agios Antonios in Cyprus

International Fellow, Adam Hirsch, in front of the mural at Agios Antonios in Cyprus

Upon completing their fellowships, alumni of the PPI International Fellowship program have gone on to careers in fields including finance, technology, sports management, social entrepreneurship, and international development and have attended graduate schools including the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Columbia University Business School, and Tuft’s Fletcher School of Diplomacy. Thibault Manekin, a 2003-2006 fellow from the PPI-South Africa program, said, “…one of [PPI's] biggest lessons was how much we [Fellows] learned about people, and that’s translated really well into the work [I am] doing now.” Thibault currently heads Seawall Development, a company which is innovatively revitalizing Baltimore’s abandoned industrial landscape.

Adam reiterated the importance of his experience as a PPI Fellow, and encourages others to participate in the International Fellowship Program. He said, “I am so grateful to those who made this experience possible, but the impact of the PPI Fellows is ongoing, and there are a lot more children and communities that can benefit from our work.”

PPI is now accepting applications for the International Fellowship program. Applications can be found here.

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Through My Eyes – Parents cross borders for their kids

The Spring Basketball Tournament

The Spring Basketball Tournament united over 200 Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot youth

This week’s blog is written by International Fellow, Ashley Johnson. Last week PeacePlayers-Cyprus held its annual Spring Basketball Tournament  at the English School of Kyrenia, a British school that sits on the northern, Turkish-Cypriot, side of the island. The tournament not only united Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot children, but brought parents and family members together. For some, it was their first time returning home since the conflict nearly 40 years earlier.

The dream-like beauty surrounding Kyrenia

The dream-like beauty surrounding Kyrenia

Imagine, a young child forced to leave the only home they have ever known, not knowing if you will ever return. It’s tough to see life through these eyes.  This is the experience of displaced people all across the globe and the personal experience of countless Cypriots. When the island was divided  in 1974, Turkish-Cypriots living in the south of the island were whisked away to the north, while at the same time Greek-Cypriots living in the north were forced from their homes, some within the span of just a few hours.  The two communities suffered greatly, their youth nothing but a fading memory. Children could only visit their their old playgrounds when they closed their eyes at night to dream.

Now, imagine you are this individual.

Parents watch on the sidelines as their kids play

Parents watch on the sidelines as their kids play

Open your eyes. Forty years have passed from the day you were forced from your home and suddenly you find yourself in an unfamiliar setting.  In 2003, the UN administered Green Line which completely separated the north of Cyprus from the south, was opened up for the first time, finally making it possible to pass from one side to the other. Now, 10 years later, you have returned to the village of your youth, but the scene you are seeing is one you would never have conjured, not even in your wildest dreams.

You can’t trust your eyes just yet, so you attempt to take it all in with another sense, and you listen.   What you hear are kids laughing, basketballs bouncing, whistles blowing, voices chatting Kalimera, Guniden, Goodmorning.  Unable to put together what it is you are experiencing you open your eyes.  The backdrop of your childhood sits before your eyes, the foothills of the Kyrenia Mountains, at your back the hills drop gently into the Mediterranean Sea.  This is an image so beautiful it could never leave your mind even if you could only visit it when you shut your eyes.

The winning boys team celebrates together after their championship match

The winning boys team celebrates together after their championship match

Yet once again this very image, just meters in front of you, seems so out of place, that you close your eyes again.  This time you open them just in time as a basketball comes flying out of bounds and into your lap as you sit watching from the sideline.  Forty years have passed since you have left this village and suddenly you are back, in some ways as if no time had passed at all. Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot children are playing and laughing with one another just like it used to be – only this isn’t your childhood, it’s your child’s, a new generation ready to bridge the divides of the past and create a united future.

Click here to learn more about PeacePlayers International – Cyprus.

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Happy Mother’s Day from PeacePlayers!

PeacePlayer Dimitris Charalambous and his mother Cleopatra

Cleopatra Charalambous and her son, Dimitris, outside of Larnaca, Cyprus

If it weren’t for the love, support and encouragement of our mom’s we wouldn’t be the people we are today. That is why this week, in honor of Mother’s Day, we wanted to get to know one of our amazing PPI moms, Cleopatra Charalambous,  mother of one of our very special young leaders, Dimitris.

PeacePlayer Dimitris Charalambous and his mother Cleopatra

Dimitris and his mother Cleopatra in their home in Larnaca

Cleopatra was raised in London but returned to Cyprus over 20 years ago.  A mother of four, and working full-time at UCLAN University in Pyla, Cyprus, Cleopatra is quite a busy woman.  She is the epitome of hard working, loving moms worldwide who balance their professionalism with the invaluable task of raising and shaping their children into the young leaders they dream for them to become.

Having been raised in the multi-cultural atmosphere that is London, Cleopatra  developed an understanding of the importance of respecting other cultures and seeing people as people.  Even while raising her children in the quiet community of Larnaca, Cleopatra has managed to pass along these important  values to her children.

Dimitris (left) getting ready to play with his bi-communal team at the Hasna Cup in Norway

Dimitris (left) getting ready to play with his bi-communal team at the Hasna Cup in Norway

Six months ago Cleopatra’s 16 year old son Dimitris joined PeacePlayers and has already become a standout participant. After demonstrating leadership on and off the court, Dimitris was chosen to attend our Leadership Development Camp in Kantara  and travled to Norway with the PeacePlayers bi-communal boys’ team to compete in the Hansa Cup.

“PeacePlayers has been such a great opportunity for Dimitris, it is only too bad that he found out about the organization so late.  He doesn’t want to detach from the organization so when he finishes playing he wants to become a PeacePlayers leader.”

Dimitris with his new friend Tunc at the LDP camp in Kantara

Dimitris (left) with his new friend, Tunc, at the LDP camp in Kantara

Cleopatra has been very supportive of her son’s interest in PeacePlayers, and is thankful for the opportunity for Dimitris to develop new friendships with young people from all over Cyprus. When we asked Dimitris if his mom was nervous about going to the LDP camp in Kantara he said, “I don’t think so. She thinks it is great for me to have friends that are Turkish-Cypriots and I would spend more time with them.”

Cleopatra is the kind of encouraging parent that we as an organization are grateful for. When asked what she would like to see from PeacePlayers in the future, she responded, “I would love to see more children in Cyprus have the opportunity to be a part of PeacePlayers.  The organisation is an excellent tool for promoting good relations between our Turkish-Cypriot and Greek-Cypriot communities, and the kids that are involved are getting a lot out of it.”

On behalf of the entire PPI family around the world, we are wishing every mom a Happy Mother’s Day!

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PeacePlayers Kids “Big Winners” in Norway

The PeacePlayers team with their finals opponents in Bergan, Norway

The PeacePlayers team with their finals opponents in Bergan, Norway

This week, as Nate Robinson of the Chicago Bulls was willing his team to a triple overtime victory, and Stephen Curry rained threes out of Oakland, a group of young PeacePlayers were competing for their own championship. A team of 12 young basketball players, six Greek-Cypriot and six Turkish-Cypriots from PeacePlayers – Cyprus traveled to Norway this week to participate in a Norwegian youth basketball tournament in Bergen – the Hansa CupHere is an update from PPI – Cyprus Managing Director, Marina Vasilara:

PPI Coach, Thanasis, communicates with his mixed team of Greek-Cypriots and Turkish-Cypriots in English

PPI Coach, Thanasis, communicates with his mixed team of Greek-Cypriots and Turkish-Cypriots in English

Our team’s trip to Norway is not over yet, but earlier today, after a long (11 hour) bus ride from Oslo to Bergen, our team with 1000% effort made it to the finals and got second place!  An unbelievable achievement from a complete ‘outsider’ team.  Second place is not bad, but our kids are in every respect the big winners – from what they gained this past 5 days from their host families in Nesodden, playing with the Harlem Globetrotters, putting on a presentation about PeacePlayers and Cyprus at a local high school , and visiting  the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to meet with the Minister himself.  We are extremely proud of them! 

The trip has been making headlines in the local news. This article -"PeacePlayers Cyprus Finish Second" - is from a Turkish-Cypriot newspaper.

The trip has been making headlines in the local news. This article -”PeacePlayers Cyprus Finish Second” – is from a Turkish-Cypriot newspaper.

The trip is part of PeacePlayers’ continuous effort to bring together youths from different backgrounds to learn from one another and contribute to a better future in Cyprus. Since its creation in 2006, PPI’s programs in Cyprus have worked with over 3,000 youth from the island’s ethnically divided communities. In a recent article in the CyprusMail, the Norwegian Ambassador, Sjur Larsen said: “PeacePlayers and the Norwegian embassy share the same vision, to unite Cypriot youth across the island. We believe that by bringing these youths together they will learn from each other and be better able to contribute to Cyprus in the future.”

Let us know what you think! Write your thoughts in the comments section and connect with us on Twitter and Facebook!

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Introducing PPI-CY’s New Intern, Giannis Ktisis

Giannis' joins the PPI-CY team as our new intern

Giannis’ joins the PPI-CY team as our new intern

The University of Cyprus recently contacted PeacePlayers about the possibility to connect students with our organization as volunteer interns.  The University has created a program and course titled Volunteerism Theory and Practice.   The spring semester is the pilot phase for the new initiative and PPI-CY has been chosen as a participating organization to host a volunteer from the university.   The goal is for the students to gain practical experience and work skills.  The hope is that the students can get to know different work environments and better define their ideas for their future.  We hope that this initial phase will begin a longstanding relationship and promote a culture of volunteerism among University students in Cyprus. This week’s blog introduces our new intern Giannis Ktistis:

Tell us about yourself: 

My family is from Nicosia, so I grew up here.  I am currently studying Social Sciences at The University of Cyprus where I am in my senior year.  I am a musician and have been playing drums for 9 years.  I love to travel and spent a year living and studying in Barcelona, Spain.

How did you hear about PeacePlayers-Cyprus?

I am taking a course at the University called Volunteer Practices, there is a practical aspect to the course in which each student volunteers for 2 months with a local organization.  I wanted to connect with an organization working within conflict resolution.  I spoke with my professor who offered a list of organizations that we could connect with and I found PeacePlayers on the list.  I began to do some research online and found the work quite interesting. 

What made you interested in working with an organization working within conflict resolution? 

From a young age I have always been an observer.  I am intrigued by the human interaction side of conflict.   For me, we aren’t two communities divided, there are many other divisions even within each community.  I think it is the education that we get that focuses everyone’s thoughts on the Greek Cypriot/Turkish Cypriot division.

What do you appreciate most about PeacePlayers?

I think working with youth under the age of 18 is essential and can have a great impact on our community.  Youth under the age of 18 are at such a crucial time in their life and it is very important to have positive influences in their life at this stage.

What do you hope to do after the internship?

After my internship and graduating from University I would like to continue volunteering.  I am hoping to become a volunteer with EVS in Spain.   I love traveling and learning about different cultures.  Volunteering is a great way to experience both traveling and new cultures.  Volunteering is also about enjoying what you do, helping others and not waiting for something in return.  Through volunteering you are given the chance to see the world with a different eye.

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PPI-Cyprus Welcomes 2 New Teams!

A PeacePlayers Mural announces our presence on the walls of the elementary school in Kolossi

A PeacePlayers Mural announces our presence on the walls of the elementary school in Kolossi

PeacePlayers – Cyprus is welcoming two new teams to our family of teams for the 2013 season.  Kolossi, an elementary school in a village outside of Limassol, and Aklantzia, an elementary school on the outskirts of Nicosia. Last year PeacePlayers painted a special mural with the children of Kolossi at the entrance of the school. The kids of Kolossi are very excited for an opportunity to be a part of PeacePlayers again.  Aklantzia is a new elementary school for PeacePlayers to collaborate with.  There is already such a strong interest in our program at Aklantzia that we have created 2 teams within the school.

Both elementary schools received funding through The Ministry of Education to fund the establishment of PeacePlayers programs in their respective schools. The Ministry of Education offers a limited number of grants for schools to provide activities to their students that focus on either health initiatives or initiatives that promote positive citizenship.  After having hosted a training on The Anatomy of Peace for educators, many teachers became interested in the work of PeacePlayers and our holistic approach to youth development through the game of basketball.  Our unique combination of training the youth in the game of basketball promotes physical activity and a healthy lifestyle, this combined with the life skills training we offer our participants makes PeacePlayers a great partner for schools looking to promote health and citizenship initiatives for their youth.

One of the needs identified at both schools was a sense of inclusion and diversity awareness for the young students.  In Cyprus nearly 10% of all students within the public school system are foreigners.  Inclusion and diversity awareness are two focuses of our new Life Skills curriculum and give us the perfect opportunity to test and evaluate our new curriculum’s ability to promote such values.  We will be promoting inclusion and diversity within their own team and school and reinforcing these values. Eventually, the kids from these two new teams in the south meet and play with our Turkish-Cypriot teams from the north during our monthly Twinnings.   Continue to follow our blog for updates on these two new programs!

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Giving the Gift of Time

A few of our Lapta girls huddle with their teammates before the game with their local school team

A few of our Lapta girls huddle with their teammates before a game with their local school team

“When you give someone your time, you are giving them a portion of your life that you’ll never get back.  Your time is your life.  That is why the greatest gift you can give someone is your time.” – Rick Warren

This quote came to my mind Tuesday night when I drove up north to the city of Girne where 5 of our girls who play on the Lapta team had a game with their school team.  I entered the gym and there was Zalihe, the coach of our Lapta girls team.  She does not coach at the girls’ local high school but she wanted to be there to support her young players. When the girls ran out onto the court to warm-up you could see how they lit up when they looked towards the stands and saw Zalihe there to support them.  When their team walked over to the bench they ran right over to their coach to give her a high five.

Coach Zalihe on the court with PeacePlayers

Coach Zalihe on the court with PeacePlayers

Sometimes as coaches we don’t realize how much little actions add up in our players’ minds.  Just being present in their lives can be more influential than we ever know.  If they truly sense that their coach cares for them as players and as people they begin to understand they are valued.

I love seeing examples of the influence that coaches have in the lives of their players.  At PeacePlayers it is our goal for our coaches’ role to naturally extend beyond the court and be that of a role model and mentor.  One cannot force this upon a coach it has to come naturally.  Which is why I was so proud to see in person the efforts of Zalihe with her young girls that extend beyond the basketball court.  She gives her girls the gift of her time, and this is how they begin to sense how valued they are in their coaches’ eyes.

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PeacePlayers Gets Animated!

A glimpse into the upcoming animated PeacePlayers video

A glimpse into the upcoming animated PeacePlayers video

PeacePlayers – Cyprus is excited to announce they are currently working in collaboration with the Cyprus Community Media Centre (CCMC) in creating an innovative animated video that will promote the capacity of sports as a practical and proven vehicle to create social change. The finished product will become a tool used across our PPI sites as well as by our Technical Assistance team consulting on projects and with organizations worldwide.  With the video we seek to empower organizations, expand the field of current practitioners, create a meaningful and powerful tool that coaches and teachers can use while working with youth.

Three months ago The Peace It Together Network, funded through UNDP-ACT and USAID, called for proposals in the launch of The Knowledge and Innovation Fund grants. According to the Peace It Together: “The Knowledge and Innovation fund was developed to offer new perspectives and approaches to peace building.  Challenging those seeking to submit proposals to develop innovative ideas towards the promotion of peace and reconciliation and enhance dialogue.”

Drawing upon PeacePlayers International’s global experiences in using sport to bridge divides, PeacePlayers – Cyprus applied for and received full funding for an animated video project. The project will be composed of 5 short chapters that will follow one young girl, growing up within a community afflicted by conflict, and how the power sport helps her overcome it.

Though, we at PPI do not have a lot of experience with animation, we do posses a tremendous amount of institutional knowledge on the power of sport in conflict transformation.  We are harnessing this knowledge to collaborate with our creative associates at the CCMC and Ze’deM Media to write scripts, create storyboards, and bring it all to life with animation. The final project should be completed in only 2 months!

For progress updates on PeacePlayers upcoming animation, continue to follow our blog as well as our PeacePlayers – Cyprus Facebook page.

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And the Golden Globe goes to… PeacePlayers!

Golden Globe Hosts, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, highlight a night saluting girl power

Golden Globe hosts, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, shine in a night full of girl power

Last night as America tuned in to see our television and movie celebrities awkwardly accept their awards on the 70th edition of the Golden Globes, we couldn’t help but feel the urge to give our own awkward thank you speech to our very own celebrities, the many coaches and staff that run our PeacePlayers programs around the world. In Belfast, coaches in the PPI - Northern Ireland program bring children from historically conflicting  Protestant and Catholic communities together in another celebratory event, basketball. The Northern Ireland staff did a particularly great job this year, hosting several large tournaments, as well as participating the Belfast Interface Games, that featured another star, NBA center Brook Lopez! 

Many of PPI's programs focus on empowering women through sport

Many of PPI’s programs focus on empowering women through sport

In Cyprus, our staff brought hundreds of Turkish-Cypriot and Greek-Cypriot girls and boys together to play basketball on mixed teams in the United Nations Buffer Zone, the one place in the country where the children can meet on neutral ground. At the same time, PPI - South Africa helped kids deal with issues like HIV/AIDS, teaching them skills to overcome peer pressure and become young leaders in their communities. The big blockbuster hits out of the PPI – Middle East program include the All-Star League, the Jerusalem Peace League and the Jerusalem Girls Basketball League that feature players from Arab and Jewish communities in Israel and the West Bank.

The Golden Globes had a lot of girl power last night. From Tina Fey and Amy Pohler’s hilarious hosting to Lena Dunham’s TV show “Girls” winning big. Former President Bill Clinton made an appearance to introduce the Steven Spielberg film “Lincoln.” But show host Poehler delighted the crowd when she returned to the stage and said ecstatically, “That was Hillary Clinton’s husband!” Girls are showing off their power in PeacePlayers too. Last year, girls made up 54% of PPI’s total participants, and several programs are dedicated solely to helping women overcome social barriers.

Actors often talk about all the hard work and dedication that goes into winning a Golden Globe, but I would like to recognize all the coaches, mentors and players involved in PPI, who pour their heart and soul into basketball and peace building every day. The exit music is starting to play, but before they escort us off the stage, I want to say thanks to all of our supporters around the world who help PeacePlayers make our globe a little more golden.

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