In 2010, 12-year-old Nathan Eyuso became one of the first skateboarders in Ethiopia.
He bought an old board off a guy on the street for a dollar, learned some tricks off YouTube, and proceeded to shock his neighbors like Marty McFly in Back to The Future.
"They'd be like, 'Is there a magnet in there?' " Eyuso laughs. "Nobody knew what skateboarding is."
Today, he has plenty of company. In April, Ethiopia opened its first skateboard park, on the grounds of a government youth center in Addis Ababa, where Eyuso lives. The country is hoping to one day take its share of the $5 billion skateboard industry.
But for Sean Stromsoe, a 22-year-old photographer from California, the park is also a return to skateboarding's roots.
In 2013, Stromsoe came to Ethiopia on assignment and ran into Eyuso and his friends.
"It was just 20 kids that were sharing, I think five boards?" Stromsoe recalls. He felt as if he was looking back in time — to an era when skateboarding wasn't as commercialized and competitive as it is today.
Watching these Ethiopian skaters, he says, "the thing I noticed was there wasn't so much judgment. Like some kid will be doing a handstand on the skateboard and everyone will be cheering and the next kid is going to do a tre-flip."
For non-skaters, a tre-flip looks like
this
A
handstand
In America each style and sub-style has its own devotees and defenders. Whereas in Ethiopia, Stromsoe says, skateboarding felt more communal and fun, "like maybe 40 years ago [in the U.S.]. You don't see that so much back home. Because skateboarding has become pretty serious."
Sean is still based in California but visits Ethiopia regularly. He co-founded a nonprofit —
Ethiopia Skate
The skatepark will protect young skaters from collisions with cars (Ethiopia has one of the highest
road fatality rates
I also meet Feven Birhana standing next to her SUV, a mom watching her 8-year-old, Abel.
He's easy to spot — the only kid in the park wearing a helmet and knee pads. "It's only his third day doing skating!" she says.
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