Namibia’s capital, Windhoek, served as host to the inaugural FIFA Football for Schools (F4S) Festival, marking a significant moment in the deepening integration of sport and education across the African continent. Organised by the Namibia Football Association (NFA) in collaboration with FIFA, the two-day festival brought together more than 200 participants, comprising children, educators, volunteers, and grassroots football coaches.
The FIFA Football for Schools programme—a global initiative aimed at making football more accessible to children while integrating life skills and educational values—saw a practical embodiment in Namibia through this pioneering festival. Designed to extend beyond the traditional structures of organised sport, F4S focuses on equipping young people not merely with technical football skills but also with foundational life competencies, encouraging holistic development. As outlined on the FIFA Football for Schools platform, the initiative provides tools for educators and community facilitators to use football as a medium for teaching discipline, cooperation, resilience and critical thinking.
In Windhoek, the programme was actualised through a tournament involving 16 teams from eight primary schools, each team playing at least four matches. The structure encouraged participation over competition, with group leaders rewarded with an additional ‘bonus match’. MH Greef Primary School emerged as a standout performer, securing both the girls’ and boys’ trophies—a reflection not solely of athletic prowess but of consistent community investment in inclusive sports programming.
The festival’s format also emphasised sustainability. According to the NFA, teachers and coaches involved in the programme were introduced to the FIFA Football for Schools mobile application, which provides a digital toolkit comprising training modules and educational content. Each session within the app pairs football drills with life-skills lessons, aligning with broader pan-African pedagogical shifts that seek to move away from rote learning towards applied, learner-centred methods. The platform encourages educators to continue running activities during physical education lessons or after school, fostering continuity long after the festival ends.

Namibia’s engagement with this programme reflects a broader continental trend. From Senegal to Rwanda, several African nations have embraced F4S as part of wider strategies to democratise access to sport, while also addressing socio-educational disparities. Such initiatives are deeply relevant in a context where many schools—particularly those in marginalised communities—lack the infrastructure or curricular frameworks to support sport as a developmental tool.
What is noteworthy in the Namibian context is the local ownership demonstrated through the NFA’s coordination and the schools’ enthusiastic participation. Rather than being an imported solution, the programme’s success in Windhoek illustrates how global initiatives can be locally contextualised, drawing on indigenous pedagogical knowledge, community structures, and existing educational policies. It is this model of localisation, rather than replication, that offers a more sustainable approach to youth development in Africa.
While the F4S initiative is global in its reach, its implementation in Namibia and other African countries speaks to the continent’s agency in reshaping narratives around development. Instead of being viewed as passive recipients of global aid, countries like Namibia are repositioning themselves as active agents crafting youth-oriented strategies that are contextually grounded and future-facing. The emphasis on football as a pedagogical medium allows for a more human-centred approach—where sport is not an end in itself, but a conduit for social transformation, identity formation, and collective empowerment.
As Namibia takes its first steps into the FIFA Football for Schools ecosystem, the Windhoek festival stands as a microcosm of what is possible when educational reform, community mobilisation, and sporting culture converge. The event not only underscores the importance of grassroots involvement but also reflects a growing continental consciousness that African children deserve more than access—they deserve agency, relevance, and dignity in how they learn and grow.







