AccaMate logo
Antonio Rüdiger: ‘Refugees have no other choice – it’s important they be listened to’

Football News

Antonio Rüdiger: ‘Refugees have no other choice – it’s important they be listened to’

Thursday, 04 June 2026

Drawing on his own family’s experience, the Real Madrid and Germany defender is advocating for refugees and challenging stereotypes

As a child, Antonio Rüdiger would look out of his bedroom window to see whether anyone was playing on the field it overlooked. It was not a big pitch, but it had two goals, enough room for six-a-side and was where a young Rüdiger honed the skills that would take him to the top.

He grew up in Neukölln, Berlin, in a community largely made up of refugees, where his parents settled after fleeing civil war in Sierra Leone. It was, by his own account, a tough area, and football kept him out of trouble.

Rüdiger, preparing to represent Germany at the World Cup, says: “We didn’t have phones to call each other: ‘Hey, let’s link up.’ No. We just looked out of the window, we saw there are guys playing football, so let’s go. That was the call. This is the nice thing about Germany; you have everywhere those types of fields. Just these days they’re not much used any more because we’re human beings and we changed to a digital life.”

The Real Madrid defender has opened up about his upbringing after joining the “Gamechanging Team” of the UN high commissioner for refugees (UNHCR) – a group of footballers with displacement backgrounds standing with refugees and challenging stereotypes. Rüdiger does not want you to feel sorry for him for enduring hardships. Far from it. He remembers a vibrant, close community with “a lot of togetherness”.

“If someone didn’t have enough food or milk, they visited a neighbour and asked,” he says. “We would share everything. It was this type of feeling. It was one of the best experiences in my lifetime.”

“If someone couldn’t speak the language, the football language we all understood. It was great and this follows until today. Today you play with so many people from different backgrounds: black, white, whatever – it doesn’t matter.”

Rüdiger is the youngest of six siblings. Only he and one of his sisters were born in Germany. The rest escaped Sierra Leone soon after civil war broke out in 1991 and the Revolutionary United Front attempted to overthrow the government. The conflict lasted 11 years and displaced about 2.5 million people – approximately half the population. Villages were destroyed and relatives scattered across different countries.

When Rüdiger was older, he asked his parents – his German father, Matthias, and Sierra Leonean mother, Lily – about their journey and how Sierra Leone compared with Germany. “It was for them simple to come here for us young ones to have a better life,” he says.

“You have the utmost respect for them. It’s not easy to leave somewhere behind and start somewhere new. Especially as it’s not that people are seeking refuge because they want to – no, because they have to. They have no other choice. Because this happened to my family I can understand those people and feel with them. It’s important that they be listened to.”

Rüdiger believes negative stereotypes about refugees are unfair. “In everything we have good and bad,” he says. “It goes hand in hand, unfortunately. But this is life. Some people had terrible experiences with refugees. We have to be honest as well, there are good ones coming here who really want to turn over their lives.”

He calls for perspective and understanding. “If someone commits a crime, if the person is black, for example, does that mean every black person is a criminal? No, you have to deal with that specific person … people have to think a bit more.”

Everything Rüdiger and his family have been through has shaped a compassionate outlook. In 2022, he set up the Antonio Rüdiger Foundation, raising funds for primary and secondary schools in Sierra Leone to invest in education, wellness and sport. He has, he says, “a lot of energy to help those who are in need”.

Rüdiger heads to his third World Cup after Madrid failed to win a major trophy for a second successive season. Reports in Spain paint a picture of a troubled institution, and José Mourinho is due to return to the club where he won La Liga 14 years ago. “These things can happen that you go two years without winning a trophy,” Rüdiger says. “Of course, there’s a lot of noise and everything. There’s a lot of things … I wouldn’t say more important … but this is football, it can happen. You just need to do the right measures and be honest with yourself, make the right conclusions and go for another year. Very simple.” He adds: “What do you want us to do? At the end of the day we should cry still over the last seasons? No. Find the right conclusions and move forward, because what is lost now you cannot win back.”

Rüdiger has little time to dwell on disappointment with Germany’s opening World Cup game, against Curaçao, approaching. Germany are four-time World Cup winners, second only to Brazil. But since lifting the trophy in 2014, they have not made it past the group stage and they have not progressed beyond the European Championship quarter-finals since 2016.

“As a huge country like Germany with huge football history, you don’t go to the World Cup just to say: ‘Hi, we are here,’” Rüdiger says. “You try to do the best you can. Of course, there are teams these days who are ahead of us. But it’s not bad sometimes maybe to be in the underdog position.”

Which is, of course, something Rüdiger knows all about. Making it from that small pitch in Neukölln to the World Cup and winning trophies at Chelsea and Real Madrid is a great underdog story.

“If I came from this situation and I came out of it,” he says, “anyone can do it.”

To find out more about UNHCR’s Gamechanging Team visit unrefugees.org.uk/gamechangers

Rate this article:

Source: The Guardian · View original article ↗

This article has been sourced from an external provider and does not represent the views or opinions of AccaMate.

More recent stories