Jerome Boateng: I was subjected to racist abuse as an 11-year-old
‘Another kid’s dad called me… you know (the word).’ What he means is the ‘N’ word and he has a natural reluctance to speak it out loud. ‘I didn’t know how to take it. The whole game he was speaking to me and I started crying because I was small, 11 or 12 years old.
‘My dad came round. He didn’t talk to this guy, he talked to me and said, “Look. Calm down. Play your game. Don’t listen. Just show what you can do with the ball and that’s it”. And other parents came around and told the guy: “What are you doing? Just be quiet and let the kids play. Look how young they are!”.’
Boateng spent a single season at Manchester City before returning to his homeland in 2011
Boateng has won the Champions League with Bayern Munich (left) and the World Cup with Germany (right)
Boateng is
understandably reflective as he ponders such painful childhood
memories. To English audiences he is the one who got away from
Manchester City. He spent a season there under Roberto Mancini, being
played out of position, before being offloaded to Bayern Munich. Since
then he has become a vital part of Bayern and Germany — winning the
World Cup, where for many he was man of the match in the final, the
Champions League, two Bundesliga titles and the German Cup twice.
On
Tuesday, Bayern resume their quest to win the Champions League under Pep
Guardiola, taking on Shakhtar Donetsk. How City, who face Barcelona the
following week, would love to have him as a regular partner to Vincent
Kompany now.The pair were close friends, first at SV Hamburg and then
during their time at City.
As the son
of a black Ghanaian father and white German mother, Boateng grew up in
the multi- cultural district of Charlottenburg, in west Berlin, so his
German experience was far removed from the stereotype of the country. In
such an environment, racism was rare.
He had
only heard the ‘N’ word once before that junior football match and, even
though the context was different, it still retained its power to shock
and belittle.
Boateng will return to Champions League action when Bayern Munich host Shakhtar Donetsk in the last 16
The German defender celebrates after scoring a late winner against former club City last season
Boateng covers Bayern coach Pep Guardiola in beer after winning the Bundesliga title last year
Aged 10,
he featured in a rap music video, playing the part of the black MC as a
child. Afterwards, the rappers, in an attempt to be friendly, used the
‘N’ word to him, as young black Americans often do as a term of
comradeship.
‘I was
making a music video and there were German rappers and I played him as a
small guy,’ says Boateng, ‘Afterwards they called me: “Hey, you little.
. .”, you know. And I just ran away and started crying because I never
heard this word used against me. And then they came and tried to
(explain). I was 10 years old — and that’s what I experienced, when I
cried two times.
‘Then I
spoke with my mum about it and she explained a lot of stuff to me and
that’s she jealous of my colour and stuff like this. She was
super-understanding. She said they don’t know, they are just jealous and
to be proud that I had a colour like this. It was really good to know —
she gave me a good feeling.’
The
incidents are footnotes in his bigger story but colour is a part of his
story. He represents modern Germany, just as Mesut Ozil and Lukas
Podolski also do with their respective Turkish and Polish roots.
Boateng’s half-brother, the former Portsmouth and AC Milan player,
Kevin-Prince, opted to play for Ghana. For Jerome, whose father was
always involved in his upbringing and lived near him despite the fact
that his parents split when he was young, there were no mixed loyalties.
‘It was
always Germany for me, 100 per cent. I know these people are just dumb,
stupid,’ he said. ‘Where I grew up it was multi- cultural from the first
day, as I had a lot of friends who are half this and half this. I have a
lot of German friends also. How I am now, it’s because I grew up in
Berlin with so many different cultures.’
Boateng (left) celebrates with Germany team-mates after being crowned 2014 World Cup champions
Boateng makes a last ditch tackle to deny Lionel Messi and Ezequiel Lavezzi in the final against Argentina
Boateng is part of Germany’s new multi-cultural generation that includes Sami Khedira (2nd right)
Boateng celebrates with the European Cup after winning the Champions League in 2013
He
appreciates the importance of his story domestically and globally. He is
currently one of the vice- captains of the German national team, with
Bastian Schweinsteiger the main captain. Should he one day captain the
team, it would send an important message — though he is clear he sees
that as a future event rather than something imminent, as he feels a
recent interview made it look as though he was lobbying for the job. ‘I
just want to explain again because they took it as though I want to be
captain now.
‘It’s not
like I want to take something from Bastian. Joachim Low (the Germany
national team manager) said in an interview that Toni Kroos or I can be
captain also. I said that would be a big honour for me one day to be
captain of Germany with my colour.’
He is
aware of the roles Paul Ince, Sol Campbell and Rio Ferdinand have played
in establishing the leadership credentials of black players in western
Europe by captaining England. ‘They are good role models,’ he said.
‘France also; (Patrick) Vieira was captain. So for me it would be a
great honour to be captain.’
Because it
would send a message? ‘To all Germany and the world. Maybe they look on
Germany and say it’s mixed but it’s not possible they have a black
captain.’
Boateng is
an impressive figure both in terms of height — he’s 6ft 4in — and his
manner. The failure of City to integrate him at the club remains a
puzzle to outsiders. ‘I was young. My girlfriend was pregnant, we wanted
her to stay in Germany and have the baby there. Then I started with a
knee injury. The coach promised that I’d play central defence — but I
played right, I played left.
Bayern Munich’s Jerome Boateng pre-season beach training
Boateng’s half-brother Kevin-Prince chose to represent Ghana instead of Germany at international level
‘Then I had another knee injury, I had an operation also, so I was not happy with the whole situation. And then Bayern came.
‘But I
learned so much, even in training, from the players there. That’s why I
made the move — Vieira, Kompany, (Carlos) Tevez, (Emmanuel) Adebayor at
this time — they are all great players. So I learned a lot about myself
also and they gave me good advice and that’s why I say I’m not sad that I
went to Manchester.’
Having
been at City, he appreciates the scale of the ambition at the club and
their desire to win the Champions League but he also knows that process
is never as quick as winning a domestic league title. ‘It takes time
because the Champions League is difficult and it’s different to the
league and cup. One small mistake or one detail, it’s finished. City
have the opportunity, for sure, to win it. They have great players,
there will be great players in the future.’
This group
of players at Bayern had to learn their lessons painfully and slowly,
losing finals in 2010 and 2012 before finally winning at Wembley in
2013. Boateng’s first season at the club included the bitter
disappointment of losing the final to Chelsea on penalties in their own
stadium. ‘Even though they didn’t deserve it!’ he says, laughing. ‘No,’
he adds, correcting himself. ‘That’s football. If we don’t take it, they
deserve it. That was the worst feeling in my life, really. I couldn’t
eat for two days.’
A young Boateng plays for Germany against Russia in the U19 European Championship in 2007
The defender makes a tackle on future team-mate Bastian Schweinsteiger while playing for Hamburg
Bayern Munich’s loss to Chelsea in the 2012 Champions League final spurred them on to win it the next year
At that
stage Philipp Lahm, Schweinsteiger, Boateng and team-mates were
caricatured in Germany as serial losers with club and country; always
the nearly men.
‘I
remember the day after the Chelsea final Thomas Muller sent a message,
not only to me but to a couple of players, saying: “Look — this
happened. But next year we take this cup. OK!”
‘When you
come to a final you remember that message and that you have to take the
chance. It’s not every day you go into a final.’
Though these days it feels as though Boateng has made cup final appearances a pretty regular feature of his life.
And, you suspect his teams, both Bayern Munich and Germany, will have plenty more ahead of them.
Source : Dailymail.co.uk
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