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Cardiff City Reward Scheme will help children

Read all about the Cardiff City Community Reward Scheme which allows children – who may not be able to do so normally – to watch to  Championship football.

It has been set up to give the club and supporters the opportunity to make a difference in their local community and reward children who deserve it the most.
The idea of the scheme is to give children that would not normally have the opportunity to attend matches, the chance visit us with a parent or guest.

For more information visit www.cardiffcityrewards.com

Calling all Trust players!

The Trust has been challenged to a friendly game against Cardiff’s Somali community.

The match will take place on Sunday, December 16th, at Pontcanna Fields (3pm). Subs are £5 per player for the pitch and referee.

If you are interested in playing email help@ccfctrust.org with your name, email and preferred position.

Games Without Frontiers – Football for Peace and Development

Tim Hartley, Ali Abdi, Cardiff Youth Service, Andy McLaren, Lindsey Horsfield, Homeless FA.

Trust Chair Tim Hartley attended the Commonwealth Youth Exchange Council seminar to discuss the Trust’s work with the local community and last year’s project with the Kenyan Bluebirds. Here’s his report.

Football’s important to all of us, but can it actually change society? The coaches and youth workers from around who attended the recent ‘Games Without Frontiers’ seminar in Glasgow seem to think so. We had come together to discuss how we can use football as a tool to help promote understanding and peace and heard some amazing stories of the efforts people are making to mend some of society’s ills through football and fair play.

Michael and Jim from Belfast are getting young people to kick a ball at each other rather than hurl objects over the peace wall. “It does work,” said Michael, “you take the kids out of the poisoned environment of their community and into a bubble of peace and goodwill. The ‘craic’ is good and the football is a real leveller.”

Nadine Brelstaff has been working with Football 4 Peace in Israel with Arab and Israeli youths. She stops the game when there is an incident and asks the players to consider what they did and how they reacted. “We are using football lessons for everyday life,” she says. “Mind you, it was not all plain sailing over there. We were not allowed into the occupied territories. And our tournament final was disrupted by, er, a recent bombing.”

Ali Abdi, Cardiff Youth Service,Tim Hartley,Ahmed Ahmed, Wales Somaliland Link, Musa Yousuf, Somali Youth Association

We as a Trust are also trying to break down barriers and challenge the myth that football is still part of a yob culture. For three seasons now we have been inviting local communities, religious groups and new migrants to the stadium to share our passion for the City. Feedback has been positive and everyone said they would love to come again. We also have a partnership with a group of Kenyan ‘Active Citizens’ and with the help of the club have travelled to Nairobi to help train them to use football to bring communities together. Cardiff was well represented at the seminar with four of the city’s Somali youth workers also attending.

One of the most inspirational speakers at the seminar was Andy McLaren. Andy was brought up in Glasgow, played for Reading and Dundee and got a cap for Scotland. He has had his own problems with drink and drugs but now runs community schemes in his home city.  He wants to show young people in the high rise flats that there are alternatives. And it does work. Over the last two years his work with Strathclyde police has helped lower complaints about drinking and anti social behaviour and reduced knife crime.

We also heard about research showing that messages on health and sex education are better retained when they are presented through sport rather than in a classroom. So there we are, not only is football really good fun, it is also a force for good. Fact!

Tim Hartley

Trust Chair

Keenor headstone to be unveiled in City memorial garden

Fred Keenor original headstone is being unveiled in the memorial garden on Saturday before the Middlesborough game.

Fred’s nephew Graham Keenor, a member of the Trust, tells the story of how it all came about.

“As a new member of the Cardiff City Supporters’ Trust in 2009 and on looking through the minutes of the Trust’s past meetings, I noticed that one item mentioned was to tend to Fred Keenor’s grave in Thornhill Crematorium.

“This prompted me to visit the grave where Fred’s ashes had been buried and found that the memorial stone was smothered by overgrown grass and the inscription on it could barely be read as it was badly weathered.

“I decided to look into the possibility of having the stone renewed and in discussions with Thornhill Crematorium found that my late father Wilfred Keenor had been the owner of the grave and as such the ownership passed onto me and my sister. This gave me the impetus to go ahead and renew the weathered headstone at Thornhill.

“I couldn’t bear the thought of Fred’s original headstone going to the rubbish tip, so knowing at the time that Cardiff City’s new stadium would incorporate a memorial garden I decided that when the time was right I would have Fred’s original headstone reconditioned and if permitted have it as a part of that memorial garden.

“With the successful unveiling of the Fred Keenor statue last Saturday there could be no better time than the present and having received permission from Cardiff City Football Club the reconditioned stone will be unveiled this coming Saturday, November 17 at 2pm.

“I’m sure the Keenor family and fans of Cardiff City Football Club will agree that this is an appropriate setting for Fred’s original memorial stone.”

Graham J Keenor