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Romelu Lukaku, A Valued Voice In The Fight Against Racism

Romelu Lukaku has become one of the best strikers in the world recently, from criticism at Manchester United To being glorified at the Inter Milan where he won them title for the first season joining from Manchester United.

In the past decade, Vincent Kompany, Eden Hazard and Kevin De Bruyne also became prominent Belgians. They played their way into the global conscience with their fine skills and unique interpretations of the game. This season, Romelu Lukaku exploded to become a star in his own right.

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Saturday June 26 will go down in football history after Denmark’s and Lukaku’s fellow Inter-man Christian Eriksen collapsed while in the field, during a 2020 UEFA European Championship match. on this night when football seemed to matter a little less to Christian Eriksen, Lukaku took the knee and raised his right fist. Although he got roundly booed by the Russian fans in the stands, Lukaku stood bold, tall and unbowed to dispatch his opponents with two strikes to symbolize that he has become a new leader who transcends the game, fighting racism and uniting a surrealistic, divided country going ahead to dedicate one goal to Christian Eriksen who had been rushed to hospital after the incident.

Romelu Lukaku was born on 13 May 1993 in Antwerp, to Adolphine and Roger, who was also a footballer. H was born from a struggling family where at times, proper milk and even electricity were a luxury. Rats ran around the apartment. But to this situation did not hold him back, he held his head high and stayed focused to change his family’s background. At least tha was the plan.

Speaking about Lukaku, Ariel Jacobs his first senior coach at Anderlecht, recalls the life of the Belgian striker, when he joined them at first he knew nothing about him,  “I think he decided ‘this has to stop and I want to work for it’, His discretion does him honor as a player and as a person.”

At 16, Lukaku debuted for Anderlecht against Standard Liège in a high-stakes match he has called the craziest day of his life. Jacobs remembers him as a generational talent with lethal instincts and an impressive physique, but there was no way of telling he would become an elite striker for both Belgium and Inter Milan. At junior level, there never is.

Above all, Jacobs was struck by a quality that would come to define and at times almost consume Lukaku: his inquisitiveness. Lukaku has always craved to improve and polish his game.

The Childhood Dream

Romelu Lukaku’s dream was to join the club that he held so dear in his heart, the Chelsea football club and in 2011, Lukaku moved to Chelsea, the club he dreamt of playing for as a child. Before making the move to Chelsea Ariel Jacobs his senior coach had warned him against such a decision that according to Jacobs was bound to have implication in his game career especially at the Club.

The teenager, however, dismissed the prospect of spending time on the bench in London saying that he was going to fight for aposition in the starting eleven.

Predictably, the youngster dropped in the pecking order behind Didier Drogba, Fernando Torres, Salomon Kalou and Daniel Sturridge in the star-studded squad. “That was the first flashpoint,” says Jacobs.

From the glamour and glitz and Roman Abramovich’s billions at Stamford Bridge, Lukaku moved to West Bromwich Albion. He was prepared to move to a smaller club to relaunch his career. Everton was again a step up before his transfer to Manchester United. All of those experiences contributed to his development.  At Old Trafford, the Belgian was perceived as a flat-track bully and an incomplete striker. He stood accused of a heavy first touch, poor positioning and, at times, a profligacy in front of goal.  As a result, he never looked convincing in his position and drew excessive criticism day by day.

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He moved away from England to Inter Milan in 2019. On the face of it, the Serie A was no fit for Lukaku, who requires space to attack defenders on the front foot. But Antonio Conte built the team around his No. 9 and the results were spectacular: Lukaku topped the goal-scoring charts at San Siro to lead his club to a first Scudetto in a decade. But it was the manner and ethos of Lukaku’s achievement that impressed, albeit not always.

Lukaku was involved in a series of heated arguments notably one that pitied him and former colleague Zlatan Ibrahimovic when the two collided, throwing insults to each other a situation that saw Zlatan red carded later in the game.

Lukaku has become a decisive force With his skill set fine-tuned. Suddenly, he is no longer the bumbling striker, as labelled by the English press, but a meteoric star who is one of the world’s best strikers.

His technical qualities have progressed and that’s not something you’d expect from someone who is almost 2m and 100kg.

Similarly, you don’t expect such speed from someone so tall and powerful. It’s 100% his own merit.

At international level, that scepticism and doubt over Lukaku also persisted for a long time.  At Under-16 level, Christian Benteke was preferred to Lukaku to lead the line. He was relegated to the left wing, according to Jacobs, and it was a decision that prompted Lukaku to retire from the junior national teams.

It wasn’t just the coaches who doubted Lukaku. In his first 20 matches for Belgium, he scored just three goals, which was far from convincing. But above all, his somewhat clumsy style with a heavy first touch and debatable positioning irked the majority of Belgian fans. They didn’t embrace him as one of their own. They failed to do so when he was Everton’s top scorer in the Premier League and they failed him even when he wore the shirt of Manchester United.

From the start, the fans wanted Lukaku to play like Hazard or De Bruyne, but he is not like them. He doesn’t claim that either.

Struggle against embedded attitudes

Belgian public’s disapproval of Lukaku was partially steeped in more sinister motives. maybe People with different ancestry or a different colour of skin have a tougher time getting accepted in Belgium. They have to be so superb that people can’t ignore them, like Vincent Kompany.  Today, Kompany is hardly seen as someone Black but mostly as someone who excelled at the game and is now building his coaching career.

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In the past, Kompany, alongside musician Stromae, were a symbol for “Belgitude”. They embodied a new generation of Belgians of mixed origin who transcended the division between the Flemish and Francophones and were supposed to help eliminate prejudices regarding integration and multiculturalism.

But Kompany, and now Lukaku, can’t change the behavior of the electorate. They bring a feel-good factor to the Belgian fans, 90-minute patriots, but below the surface racism simmers everywhere in society. In 2014, the right-wing New Flemish Alliance won 33% of the vote. Polls suggest it will lose ground this year, with the far-right party Vlaams Belang winning as much as a quarter of the vote.

Lukaku is Kompany’s heir. No one can touch him. His stardom has allowed him to be more outspoken and expressive and become a leader alongside De Bruyne and others in the national team, which has been taking the knee ever since the Nations League match against Denmark last September. In most occasions Lukaku’s presence has been felt, He compels the team a bit to take the knee, and he has never shied away from the racism debate. To the contrary, he takes it on.

In Italy, racism is obstinate, the incident at Cagliari with Inter Milan but an example. In Saint Petersburg, the supporters’ booing at kickoff rendered Lukaku’s stance a powerful and symbolic image. Lukaku kneeled for the values he believes in and wants to defend, unlike many others in football, and that courage and persistence against all the odds have been surreal.

I am a Multimedia Journalist with five years of experience from Digital to Broadcast Media{Radio and Television}. Interested in reporting Current affairs happenings within and across the borders. I have excellent attitude towards working with others and communication skills extremely patient and persistent with the ability to formulate unique ideas and hand eye co-ordination. Ability to work under minimal supervision, curious, hardworking and polite. In another life I am a News Anchor and Reporter.

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