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Changing the game

Black History Month at USask.

SASKATOON — As a University of Saskatchewan (USask) Huskie’s Football defensive back, Katley Joseph is used to making game-altering plays on the field. Now, he’s using his platform off the field so that other Black student-athletes may do the same.

Joseph, a master’s student in the Department of Educational Foundations at USask’s College of Education, is researching how Black student-athletes are 小蓝视频 racialized in Canada.

Joseph’s first experience playing football was in Ottawa. He grew up playing recreational football with friends in his culturally diverse neighbourhood. As he grew a deeper passion for the sport, his mom signed him up to play in an organized youth league. At his first practice with the Orleans Bengals, he noticed how different his teammates looked compared to his neighborhood friends.

“I’m looking to my right, looking to my left, and I’m one of the few Black kids,” recalled Joseph. “That was a culture shock for me. Families from my neighbourhood usually couldn’t spend that much money for their kids to play. Even though my parents didn’t really have the money for the fees, they found a way for me to play.”

A shy kid growing up, he used football to break out of his shell and build character. In reflection, Joseph also recognized that he began to adjust his speech and expression and act a certain way when he was with his white teammates and coaches.

“I was trying to fit in, but that meant I couldn’t be myself,” Joseph said. “For a while I was like, ‘Oh, is that how you're supposed to act when you're around people that come from different backgrounds than you or don't resemble you.’ Football helped me break out of that shyness but at the same time, early on, I was trying to figure out who I was. I didn’t feel uncomfortable, but I felt reserved and couldn’t show my real personality.”

— Submitted by USask Media Relations

 

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