A medium for sharing
As we look on, teams of workers from abroad compete at New Taipei City’s Xinzhuang Sports Field, seeking to be crowned champions of the Taiwan Cup International Immigrants Soccer Competition.
The athletes, a mix of foreign laborers and professionals, pound up and down the length of the soccer pitch’s international-grade artificial turf in their brightly colored uniforms, the sweat pouring off of them. A row of red frame tents lined up outside the bounds of the pitch brims with joy and energy, as the scents of Indonesian, Vietnamese and Thai snacks waft through the air, stirring appetites.
The competitors are white- and blue-collar workers of various nationalities, for whom soccer serves as a common language. Friendly rivalries rather than cutthroat competitions, the matches are played in a harmonious atmosphere and with a sense of international fellowship that allows players to appreciate one another’s skills.
The Global Workers’ Organization, Taiwan (GWO), which organizes the Taiwan Cup, held the first in 2015. The 2018 Cup was the second. GWO director Karen Hsu is grateful for the help that GWO has received with the event, and says that that support is what enables it to run so smoothly. “I hope that the competition becomes a platform for exchange, one that provides foreign workers in Taiwan with a means to show their love for the game.”
A total of eight outstanding teams made up of blue-collar workers from Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand, and white-collar workers from Europe and Asia, vied for this year’s title. While some of these workers spoke English, Mandarin was the language they all shared, a side effect of which was to expand Taiwan’s “people’s diplomacy.”

The support of teammates from your own hometown helps relieve the homesickness and loneliness of living abroad.