Womenâs first team striker Danielle Carter visited a school in Worthing to explain how education is key in the fight against racism and discrimination.
Danielle visited Davison CE High School in Worthing as part of Albion in the Community's work in the Premier Leagueâs No Room For Racism campaign.
AITC organised a workshop with around 30 girls at the school, aged between 11-14, who listened as the Albion striker discussed the issue of racism and discrimination in society and shared her own experiences.
âItâs always good to visit schools in this way,â Danielle said, âAITC gave a presentation first which then led on to my experiences with racism, both within football and society in general.
âThe key message I tried to get across was that education is the key. Nobody is born a racist, so these sessions can go some way to helping make a change. If you educate one person, then they are able to go on and educate someone else â it has that knock-on effect.
âGiven their background, I donât think the girls have ever experienced racism personally, but they were really engaged and interacted well. They all seemed intelligent enough to know right from wrong, so hopefully they will now go on to become allies.
âAs I told them, you donât have to experience racism to fight it.â
Danielle sits on both the Professional Footballers Association Playersâ Board and the Premier League Black Players Advisory Group, and while she feels we are heading in the right direction, there is still plenty of work ahead to eradicate racism from the game.
âI havenât experienced racism personally in the womenâs game but thatâs not to say that it doesnât exist,â she added. âIâve played in a game for Arsenal where there has been racist chanting and, of course, there have been a number of social media issues which have been brought to light.
âGiven its coverage, there are more issues in the menâs game but Iâm encouraged to hear that the Premier Leagueâs Action Plan is having an effect and that there are now serious repercussions for any perpetrators of hate.
âThat doesnât mean we can ease up in any way, and as long as we are needing to have these conversations, then it means we still have a problem.â
The former Arsenal and Reading forward has also encouraged her fellow professionals to follow her lead and use their platform in a positive way.
âItâs good, given my profile as a WSL footballer, to be able to go out to schools, into society, and try to make a difference, but itâs also important that itâs not just black or ethnic-minority players who are sending out the message.
âAllies are as important, maybe even more so, in the fight against racism and discrimination.
âI think [anti-racism] will always be an important message. I think education is key, so these sessions that weâre putting on are vital for making change.â
Rob Josephs, Schools Manager at AITC, thinks workshops like these can make a big impression on young people.
âHearing stories directly from Danielle and having an honest conversation with her, itâs a great way to make a lasting impact on young people,â Rob said.
âThe students all have massive respect for Danielle as a womenâs football legend, and talking to her today has been a fantastic way of driving home that anti-racism message.â