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Ugandan Chess Standout Inspires Girls Battling Poverty


FILE - Phiona Mutesi stands near where she grew up in Katwe, Kampala, Uganda, Jan. 28, 2012. (H. Heuler/VOA)
FILE - Phiona Mutesi stands near where she grew up in Katwe, Kampala, Uganda, Jan. 28, 2012. (H. Heuler/VOA)

The true story of a teenager from a Ugandan slum who transformed her life from corn seller to international chess player is to make its European premiere at the London Film Festival in October.

The Disney movie, "Queen of Katwe," is based on the life of Phiona Mutesi, who around 2005 at about age 9 turned up at a sports outreach program in Katwe, a part of Kampala, for a cup of porridge and was drawn into a world of knights and checkmates.

Now Uganda's No. 3 female chess player, according to the World Chess Federation, Mutesi is hailed an inspiration to many girls for managing to escape the life of poverty she was leading on the streets with her mother after her father died of AIDS.

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Uganda is one of the poorest countries in the world; 2014 government figures show nearly 20 percent of its 38 million people live in poverty. UNICEF data show 24 percent of Ugandan children under 5 live in extreme poverty.

The movie, to be shown October 9 after opening in the United States in September, stars newcomer Madina Nalwanga as Mutesi, Oscar-winning actress Lupita Nyong'o as her mother, and David Oyelowo as her chess teacher, a soccer player turned missionary.

Oyelowo, who played Martin Luther King Jr in "Selma," praised the film for illustrating a good side of the impoverished east African country.

FILE - Phiona Mutesi, then 18, plays a game of chess with her colleagues at the chess academy in Kibuye, Kampala, Jan. 26, 2015.
FILE - Phiona Mutesi, then 18, plays a game of chess with her colleagues at the chess academy in Kibuye, Kampala, Jan. 26, 2015.

"Africa is teeming with amazing people who in spite of their, at times, difficult lives, manage to remain full of joy and hope," Oyelowo said in a statement. "This is a story where the impossible is made possible through family, mentorship, encouragement, hard work and faith, all things we can aspire to."

The film is based on a 2012 book about Mutesi, who used the money she received from film rights to buy land for her family and to continue studies toward her goal of becoming a pediatrician, according to online chess community chessgames.com.

Mutesi, who spoke at the Women of the World Summit in New York in 2013 about the obstacles she had overcome, held the first ever all-girls chess clinic in Uganda. More than 400 girls attended, but they were taught about more than chess. They learned about delaying marriage and children until after they had finished school and started their careers, according to Mutesi's website.

Uganda has one of the world's highest rates of pre-teen and teenage pregnancies, with one in every four girls aged between 15 and 19 getting pregnant, according to the Bureau of Statistics, and nearly half of girls married before 18.

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