"They are children, do not be hooligan" the Brafa Foundation launches a video denouncing violence in the stands of children's football

No, it is not easy to educate our children away from violence and we do not talk about television, movies or news, we talk about their closest environment although it is also true that measures are being taken about it and some very interesting.

"They are children, do not be hooligan" is the title of the video with which it is intended to denounce violence in the stands of grassroots sport, the one that children practice and in which they learn seeing how sometimes it's their own parents who have unacceptable behavior, aggressive and even violent with them.

That thought of “Your children don't always listen to you but they always see you” which some attribute to Gandhi, is one of those universal and irrefutable truths. They do not always pay attention to what we tell them but what they see us do is recorded, sometimes in their unconscious, but there it is and at any moment, in their day-to-day life, it naturally emerges.

"They are children, do not be hooligan" It aims to denounce and raise awareness among the parents of children who practice football.

"They are children, do not be hooligan" is the title of a video in which they are the same children who tell how they feel when they hear out of place comments coming to the field from the stands. Comments that can be made by the father of a partner or even their own parents, comments that show how adults become complete “hooligans”, something that obviously does not help or educate children, their own children.

Where does this video come from?

The Brafa Sports School It is a social entity that understands that sport is a great tool to educate but to educate children, young people and many adults.

Sport must be an environment in which values ​​such as mutual respect, pluralism and tolerance are respected but not only on the field, also in the stands, not only for the players but also for the spectators Let's not forget, in most cases they have a family bond with the children in the field, playing.

Precisely that is something that the Bafra Foundation pretend to point with this video, the players are children and they do it for fun, just for fun.

They do not play to win exclusively, they play to have a good time and if they also win then great but sport has more value in itself as an activity than simple competition, something that because of forgetting in the stands at the end, makes children in the field can not play for what they would really like, to have fun with their peers, with their friends and with their parents.