Usman Khawaja told me his ‘dream’ 19 years ago. He’s changed Australian cricket forever
Less than four years later, at the fifth and final Ashes Test in Sydney in January 2011 he would receive his baggy green cap, a rite of passage for all players who debut for the Australian Test team.

Usman Khawaja speaking to SBS in 2007, when he was a teenager. Source: SBS News
"I'm a proud Muslim, coloured boy from Pakistan who was told he would never play for the Australian cricket team. Look at me now," he said.
He said a white player in the same position would have been treated differently.
It worked with CA in establishing its 'Sport for All Program' in 2015. Skene said CA has done a lot of work since then to ensure higher proportions of Australia's migrant communities embrace the game at all levels.
This month's Under-19 World Cup squad includes Nitesh Samuel and Aryan Sharma, who have Sri Lankan and Indian backgrounds, respectively. Along with Alana King's starring role with Australia's women's team, they could indicate the multicultural future of cricket is bright.

Australia's Alana King celebrates the wicket of New Zealand's Brooke Halliday during the ICC Women's Cricket World Cup cricket match between New Zealand and Australia in 2025. Source: AAP / Rafiq Maqbool/AP
Khawaja started his own foundation in 2018 to help youth from migrant communities achieve their potential. He has also called for Islamophobia to be condemned, and met with the prime minister last year to campaign for support for Gazans.

Babar Azam donates a team jersey to Usman Khawaja for the Usman Khawaja Foundation during a media opportunity at The Gabba in 2024. Source: Getty / Albert Perez
"For one last time to be thankful for what I've been given," he said.

Usman Khawaja kissed the turf after he was dismissed playing his last match during day five of the fifth test in the 2025/26 Ashes series at Sydney Cricket Ground. Source: Getty / Robert Cianflone