The Prague Post - Greenland's teenage boxers throwing punches to survive

EUR -
AED 4.202414
AFN 73.234648
ALL 93.94534
AMD 420.679135
ANG 2.048746
AOA 1049.891271
ARS 1708.316969
AUD 1.651217
AWG 2.062589
AZN 1.948912
BAM 1.955703
BBD 2.305386
BDT 141.133
BGN 1.934863
BHD 0.431579
BIF 3404.631133
BMD 1.144293
BND 1.477127
BOB 7.926607
BRL 5.915774
BSD 1.144643
BTN 109.047591
BWP 15.438234
BYN 3.321035
BYR 22428.147579
BZD 2.302086
CAD 1.624839
CDF 2570.082927
CHF 0.916597
CLF 0.026912
CLP 1059.177465
CNY 7.768723
CNH 7.764608
COP 3849.009092
CRC 521.474135
CUC 1.144293
CUP 30.323771
CVE 110.259531
CZK 24.195741
DJF 203.82989
DKK 7.478638
DOP 67.806637
DZD 152.604431
EGP 56.395203
ERN 17.164399
ETB 183.546696
FJD 2.586617
FKP 0.856955
GBP 0.854556
GEL 3.015225
GGP 0.856955
GHS 13.003355
GIP 0.856955
GMD 82.962963
GNF 10038.502097
GTQ 8.735567
GYD 239.428125
HKD 8.97658
HNL 30.63648
HRK 7.538035
HTG 149.712574
HUF 353.483867
IDR 20590.870346
ILS 3.431335
IMP 0.856955
INR 108.954451
IQD 1499.425629
IRR 1574490.289046
ISK 144.089783
JEP 0.856955
JMD 181.201013
JOD 0.81129
JPY 184.648901
KES 148.002659
KGS 100.065813
KHR 4583.772648
KMF 493.190359
KPW 1029.86432
KRW 1749.366875
KWD 0.355063
KYD 0.953953
KZT 541.303152
LAK 25845.718069
LBP 102500.516042
LKR 383.390984
LRD 207.749696
LSL 18.566079
LTL 3.3788
LVL 0.692172
LYD 7.336636
MAD 10.704169
MDL 20.134001
MGA 4852.759306
MKD 61.631943
MMK 2402.882317
MNT 4099.027451
MOP 9.246541
MRU 45.681734
MUR 53.838679
MVR 17.690605
MWK 1984.90155
MXN 19.989772
MYR 4.658456
MZN 73.131954
NAD 18.566079
NGN 1567.773639
NIO 42.117911
NOK 11.260973
NPR 174.476346
NZD 2.003841
OMR 0.441358
PAB 1.144643
PEN 3.894907
PGK 5.028751
PHP 70.375146
PKR 318.232516
PLN 4.293445
PYG 6959.654806
QAR 4.184292
RON 5.227137
RSD 117.371178
RUB 88.095631
RWF 1675.716886
SAR 4.297707
SBD 9.221334
SCR 15.409236
SDG 687.148732
SEK 11.051652
SGD 1.477743
SHP 0.85433
SLE 27.863888
SLL 23995.261369
SOS 654.167554
SRD 42.986493
STD 23684.559828
STN 24.498785
SVC 10.015503
SYP 126.481133
SZL 18.563079
THB 38.133591
TJS 10.610574
TMT 4.016469
TND 3.378232
TOP 2.755184
TRY 53.515737
TTD 7.757615
TWD 36.546404
TZS 3005.850912
UAH 50.978472
UGX 4177.792784
USD 1.144293
UYU 46.037717
UZS 13712.319878
VES 731.092695
VND 30090.335139
VUV 136.092615
WST 3.173331
XAF 655.924467
XAG 0.018332
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.092509
XCG 2.062898
XDR 0.81576
XOF 655.924467
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.255012
ZAR 18.573595
ZMK 10300.011738
ZMW 21.031957
ZWL 368.461958
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

Greenland's teenage boxers throwing punches to survive
Greenland's teenage boxers throwing punches to survive / Photo: Florent VERGNES - AFP

Greenland's teenage boxers throwing punches to survive

When the bell rang, William let out a cry drowned out by the crowd: that night, the Greenlandic teen was boxing for his mother, who killed herself two years ago.

Text size:

Suicide is one of Greenland's leading causes of premature death and the autonomous Danish territory has one of the highest suicide rates in the world.

An "epidemic", some Greenlanders call it, striking above all teenagers and young adults.

"Come on, crush him!" the crowd shouted, the smell of sweat heavy beneath the Arctic island's flag hanging above the ring.

William, 15, ducked the blows of his Danish opponent before he was hit with a straight punch and collapsed in the arms of the referee.

"I was devastated," he told AFP a few days later from his home in the capital Nuuk.

"The morning of the match, I woke up crying, thinking of her. I promised her I would win," he said.

William's gaze occasionally drifted to a photograph of his smiling mother, Mette, hung on the wall.

The former Danish colony faces numerous social challenges, including drug and alcohol addiction and social inequality.

When Denmark launched a major urbanisation drive in the 1970s, hundreds of the island's indigenous Inuit families were moved from their villages and pressed into apartment blocks in larger towns.

Inuit culture is deeply rooted in the land and tight-knit community life, so leaving behind traditional hunting and fishing livelihoods triggered a sense of dislocation and loss of identity, experts say.

According to medical journal The Lancet, the displacement left deep trauma and sent suicide rates soaring in the 1980s.

Young Greenlanders still feel the effects of traumas experienced by previous generations, a concept known as intergenerational transmission, another study in the International Journal of Circumpolar Health showed.

And access to mental health support remains limited.

- 'Relief' -

After his mother's suicide, William turned first to alcohol and drugs.

His brother Kian, now 19, chose a different form of adrenaline: he pulled on boxing gloves "to clear my head".

For the pair, boxing became an escape, where they could meet "positive people".

It was also a way to honour their mother, a former Greenland martial arts champion.

Originally from northern Greenland, Mette had been placed in an orphanage in the capital Nuuk as her parents were unable to care for her.

A pile of her gold medals lay jumbled on the coffee table.

"When we were younger, we used to use her medals as trophies. We lost a couple of them," said William. "I feel like I owe her medals."

In 2023, suicide accounted for 7.4 percent of deaths in Greenland, according to the same study in The Lancet.

"We all know at least one or two family members or friends who have killed themselves," said Kian. "Or many more."

"Not so long ago, two of my friends committed suicide," added William.

At a gym in Nuuk, a group of youths grunted through push-ups ordered by their coach, 27-year-old former boxer Philippe Andersen.

"Discipline is key," he told AFP. "A couple of months before the fight, no drinking, no smoking, nothing. Nothing fun."

Some may have been bullied, lost loved ones or face social problems "but we try not to think about it while we're boxing".

"They often have something they're angry about," he said, adding boxing offered them "relief from their daily lives".

When night falls and the gym empties, Nuuk's streets fill with teenagers. Along the coast, it's not unusual to see a lone teenager staring at the sea.

Behind them, rows of Soviet-style apartment blocks tower over the cliff, remnants of Denmark's urbanisation drive in the 1970s.

On the crumbling facade of Block T, a light installation paid tribute to the victims of suicide.

- Limited help -

Despite a pressing need for psychological support, isolation in small settlements, coupled with a shortage of Kalaallisut-speaking staff, severely limits access to care.

Most consultations take place online.

But in recent years authorities have strengthened helplines and begun decentralising the training of mental health professionals to improve access to care.

Originally from Qaqortoq in the island's south, the brothers' family moved to the capital 10 years ago in search of a better life.

This summer, William will leave for Denmark to continue his studies, far from his friends and older brother.

"It's very hard," he said.

Spurred by his coaches, Kian said he hoped to join him and try out for Denmark's national boxing team -- a way for him "to move on".

A.Slezak--TPP