Young Ugandans tangle in the mud. They dream of becoming professional wrestlers

travel2024-05-22 01:18:4946

MUKONO, Uganda (AP) — In a forested area outside Uganda’s capital, a few dozen youth gather around a makeshift ring to watch two amateur wrestlers tangle in the mud.

The training sessions, complete with an announcer and referee, imitate the pro wrestling contests the teens regularly see on television. Ugandan enthusiast Daniel Bumba, known in the wrestling community as Bumbash, hopes that some of these wrestlers, many of them orphans, can do well and long enough to go professional.

It is the glimmer of a dream, with little else in place. The ring is made of bamboo poles lashed together with rope. And yet the youth pay 100,000 shillings ($26) as a commitment fee for a chance to leave the poverty of this farming region. That’s the rough equivalent of 10 days’ work by an average construction laborer, a significant amount.

The 35-year-old Bumba said he has been a wrestling fan since childhood. He became what’s known as a video jockey after college, offering lively commentary and translating WWE matches into the local Luganda language for fellow viewers.

Address of this article:http://holyseevaticancity.antjekoch.com/article-09d499900.html

Popular

Xander Schauffele gets validation and records with one memorable putt at PGA Championship

Sarah Jessica Parker divides opinion with enormous hat on set of And Just Like That

LeBron James UNFOLLOWS Diddy on Instagram after video of assault on ex

Trump or Biden? Either way, US seems poised to preserve heavy tariffs on imports

Trump film shocks Cannes as former US President is depicted 'raping' his then

Christopher Reeve Super/Man documentary

BBC Countryfile star Adam Henson's wife wrote heartbreaking goodbye letters after cancer diagnosis

Dame Judi Dench's tears as she receives Sycamore Gap tree seedling at Chelsea Flower Show

LINKS