Union Berlin’s Anthony Ujah calls on players to fight racism

FC Union Berlin's Anthony Ujah in action with Bayern Munich's Thiago, right, during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Union Berlin and Bayern Munich in Berlin, Germany, Sunday, May 17, 2020. (Hannibal Hanschke/AP)

BERLIN — Union Berlin striker Anthony Ujah has encouraged his fellow soccer players to be more proactive in the fight against racism.

“When I look at a player like Thomas Muller, who means so much to the Germans, then even one (social media) post from him is a strong statement,” Ujah wrote in a guest editorial in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper on Saturday.

“Everybody in the world of soccer knows who Thomas Muller is. And every child who wants to be like Thomas Muller, or like Manuel Neuer or Joshua Kimmich, and who follows their idol on social media can see where the stars stand.”

Muller, a forward for Germany and Bayern Munich, posted a tweet on Thursday in which he made his statements against racism.

“The signal should be that it doesn’t matter how we look or how we speak. I don’t know how to explain, but sports has the power to bring people together,” Muller said in a video that also showed other Bundesliga players’ gestures last weekend.

Ujah was the first Bundesliga player to react on social media to last month’s killing of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man, who died after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee for several minutes on his neck.

Others, including American players Weston McKennie, Zack Steffen and Tyler Adams also expressed solidarity with social media posts and/or on-field statements.

In 2014, Ujah also protested the death of another black man, Eric Garner, who died after a police officer placed him in what appeared to be a chokehold. Garner said, “I can’t breathe”, before he died, words repeated by Floyd on May 25.

“If I manage to get just five or 10 people to change their way of thinking about me, then I’ve fulfilled my role,” Ujah wrote. “Anything that someone does is better than doing nothing.”

The 29-year-old Nigerian said he was fully concentrated on Union’s goal of achieving Bundesliga survival, but that if he scores against Schalke on Sunday, “I have the chance for my campaign. That’s how I did it in the past and that’s how I will continue to do it in the future.”

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