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Can soccer help El Salvador turn from terror to trust?

El Salvador was riven by brutal violence at the hands of gangs until President Nayib Bukele took office in 2019 with a hard-line approach to crime. In the past five years, homicide rates have plummeted, and Salvadorans are opening their doors to a new sense of security and freedom.

But as citizens of the Central American nation know well, rebuilding trust takes much more than a fall in crime statistics.

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Since ancient times, sport has brought nations together. One community in El Salvador is turning to soccer to help overcome divisions sown by years of brutal gang violence and impunity.

So in the town of Reparto las Cañas, just east of the capital, San Salvador, residents have tried a novel idea: soccer tournaments. In a community where neighbors on one side of a gang rivalry wouldn’t dare cross into the other’s territory – not for school, not to visit family or friends, and certainly not to kick a soccer ball – sport is seen as a way to attempt to reconnect a community in shared public space.

“Thank God the gangs are gone,” says Miguel Angel Segovia, whose daughter Katherine was raped and decapitated by gang members here when she was just 15 years old. And even though the soccer competitions faced a setback this winter, he’s behind the attempt to use sport as a way to transcend lingering mistrust. “It’s really important that people get involved,” he says.

There are two soccer fields just 10 minutes apart on foot in this small community east of San Salvador.

One sits in the “upper” part of town, the other in the “lower.” And for more than a decade, neighbors from one side would not dare cross into the other – not for school, not to visit family or friends, and certainly not to kick a soccer ball.

Yet today it is these two pitches – as sloping, ragged, and dusty as both might be – that the community is banking on to help forge trust and unity after being divided by gang control, threats, and extortion.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Since ancient times, sport has brought nations together. One community in El Salvador is turning to soccer to help overcome divisions sown by years of brutal gang violence and impunity.

El Salvador was riven by brutal violence at the hands of gangs until President Nayib Bukele took office in 2019 pledging a hard-line approach to crime. In the past five years, homicide rates have plummeted, and citizens are opening their doors to a new sense of security and freedom.

But as residents here know well, rebuilding trust takes much more than a fall in crime statistics. So it was a love of soccer that neighbors leaned into in a novel, if still nascent, attempt to reconnect in shared public space: tournaments to bring the lower and upper parts together.

“Thank God the gangs are gone,” says Miguel Angel Segovia, whose daughter Katherine was raped and decapitated by gang members here when she was just 15 years old. And even though the soccer competitions faced a setback this winter, he’s behind the attempt to use sport as a way to transcend lingering mistrust. “It’s really important that people get involved,” he says.

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