What can we learn about the relations between Belgium and Africa by looking at football?
This collection of resources has been developed to help students aged 14-18 learn about migration. A special focus lies on the topics of:
- race and ethnicity
- (de)colonization
- culture and sport
- migration in the European-African context
- establishment of the Congo Free State (1885) and it’s Independence (1960)
Promote multiperspectivity
The sources and narratives collected here are not exhaustive, but highlight specific moments that can help discuss migration and injustice. Football is used as a tool to make the connection between migration and society, and the topic of migration, more accessible to students. To promote multiperspectivity, we have tried to use sources from different racial and ethnic backgrounds, and from individuals that have different profiles.
We advise you to use this collection as part of a broader lesson on history, colonialism, and/or migration, and to divide your students in groups to tackle the sources. Throughout the collection, you will find several questions and thinking points that you can use to discuss the topic with your students. At the end of the collection, you will find generic questions, as well as a bibliography.
![](https://euroclio.eu/wp-content/uploads/FMH-Belgium-Congo-relations-400x240.png)
Full Lesson
Project Citizen: engaging students in the active exercise of responsible citizenship
Helping all student answer challenging questions about the causes of historical events and developments
Action Research: projects as active methods to develop civic skills
How do we decide what we believe? – Helping students learn how to question beliefs and test claims to become more (self) critical and evidence based in their thinking
Augmentative Communication: the creation of visual vocabularies as a support in the study of works of art