Over five years (2021 – 2025), the Renforcement des Capacités des Filles par le Sport et le Jeu (RECAF‑Jeu) project harnessed the power of sport and play to advance girls’ rights, challenge gender norms, promote inclusion, and unlock leadership among girls, young women, and children and youth with disabilities across Senegal.

Led by Right To Play and funded by the Government of Canada through Global Affairs Canada, RECAF-Jeu was implemented across communities in southern Senegal through schools, sports clubs, local authorities, and community leaders — strengthening systems and shifting mindsets so girls and marginalized youth were not only able to participate in sport, but empowered to lead in sport and in life.

Our Impact, Measured

Across Senegal, five years of sustained investment in sport and play have driven real change for girls, young women, and marginalized youth. Together, we have demonstrated one clear truth: sport works for girls.

Five years of transformation — backed by evidence.

Youth Reached

25,000+ children and youth reached through sport and play

Supporting Girls

8500+ girls building confidence and claiming their space through sport

Inclusive Coaching

700+ coaches trained, including a growing number of female coaches

Youth Leadership

600+ youth-led advocacy actions advancing girls' rights and inclusion

Key Wins: Four Pillars of Transformation

RECAF-Jeu was designed around interlocking areas of change — from girls’ and young women’s leadership to community mindsets.

Why Girls' Sport Matters

Girls’ participation in sport is still undervalued and under‑funded — despite overwhelming evidence of its impact on education, health, leadership, and social cohesion. When girls play, they build confidence, challenge harmful norms, and step into leadership roles. Communities grow stronger and more inclusive as a result.

RECAF‑Jeu demonstrates what is possible when girls are intentionally placed at the center of sport systems. Its results show that investing in girls’ sport is not optional — it is essential for gender equality and lasting social change.

Imagine a world where girls play the sport they love without fear — and where leaders choose to put girls at the center of sports policies, budgets, and decisions.


Youth Olympics: Seven Athletes, One Global Stage

Recaf-Jeu - Youth Olympians

The Youth Olympic Games (YOG) Dakar 2026 represents a historic moment — the first YOG ever held on the African continent. Today, seven young people who began their journey through RECAF‑Jeu are preparing to represent Senegal on this world stage. Six of our seven qualifying athletes are girls. This is not coincidence. It is the direct outcome of five years of targeted coaching, inclusive spaces, and community belief-building.

Meet two of these inspiring athletes, Fatou and Elisabeth, whose journeys show how sport can unlock both potential and purpose.

What Partners Are Saying


The Renforcement des capacités des filles par le sport et le jeu (RECAF-Jeu) project, implemented by Right To Play with funding from Global Affairs Canada, empowers young people, especially girls, in Sédhiou and Ziguinchor, Senegal to build life skills, promote gender equality, challenge social barriers and lead through sport. To date, it has reached over 10,000 young people.

GAC partners-partenaires-colors-en.png - Global Affairs Canada