Kenyan Peter finds perfect place at Ferris

Ferris’ Isaac Peter sends soccer gear back to his native Kenya as part of a senior project. (Colin Mulvany)

Isaac Peter does not speak openly about the events that brought him from Nairobi, Kenya, to Spokane – via Chicago, nonetheless.

Many of them, like the death of his mother when he was a toddler in Kenya, he doesn’t remember. And some, like the death of his father one year to the day after the two arrived in the United States, are just too painful to discuss.

“I’m not sure,” the senior soccer star for Ferris High School said recently, when asked what prompted his late father, Peter Olango, to relocate from Nairobi to Chicago in 2004, when his only son was 13 years old. “But I think it was for me to have a better education, and be in a better place.”

That’s what Peter has – and where Peter is – thanks to the love and compassion of Tamara Falk, who was a nurse and case manager assigned to Olango and his son once they arrived by the Chicago-based refugee resettlement agency she represented.

It was Falk who agreed to become Peter’s legal guardian after his father died and eventually brought him to Spokane, where her parents and her brother and sister were living.

Peter has become one of the top players in the Greater Spokane League, scoring a team-high 13 goals for Ferris, which won the regular-season title but lost the district title game to Mead 2-1 on Wednesday night.

“I’m so proud of him and what he has accomplished,” said Falk, who, along with her former husband, Roger Falk, brought Peter from Chicago to Spokane a year after his father had died. They enrolled him at Sacajawea Middle School after deciding to reunite with her parents and sibling, who were living here.

“I feel like he’s done amazingly well. I just think of all the things that could have gone wrong. Yes, he’s still made a couple of left turns and spent a couple of sleepless night – especially at this time of year, at graduation, when everybody tends to think about their parents and where they came from.”

Falk, divorced from her husband, also has a daughter, Megan, who is the same age, 19, as Peter, but has graduated high school and moved on to Community Colleges of Spokane. She said the two have formed a unique bond since becoming “adoptive” siblings.

“It’s like it was meant to be,” she said of their relationship. “He and Megan get along great – like real brothers and sisters. They fight like I fight with my brothers and sisters, and yet they really watch out for each other.”

Peter claims to have had few problems adapting to life in the United States.

“My English was pretty good, but it was hard to get used to the weather and stuff,” he said.

After arriving in Spokane, Peter started perfecting his soccer skills, which he had started to hone “on a fun-only basis” while attending an academy for the underprivileged back in Jericho, near his hometown of Nairobi.

“It started out just for fun, and I guess I was pretty good at it,” said the 6-foot-3, 150-pounder. “So I started taking it seriously.”

Ferris coach Robin Crain said Peter has a genuineness about him – “ a genuineness for caring, for passion and a concern for others” – that sets him apart from many kids his age.”

Those qualities were recently on display when Peter collected shoes, shorts, jerseys and other soccer-related items and sent them back to the academy he attended in Jericho as part of his senior culminating project.

“It’s kind of cool,” said Peter, a three-year Saxons letterwinner. “I just had a lot of soccer shoes, jerseys and stuff around my house that I was getting ready to throw away, and I thought about Kenya and how they might be able to use them over there.”

As a soccer player, Crain is impressed by Peter’s strength and aggressiveness, despite his slender build.

“He’s skinny as rail, but actually much stronger than you might image,” Crain said. “He won’t admit that. But he’s very aggressive, and he won’t shy away from contact. He’s not afraid of mixing it up with who are a lot bigger than he is.”

Thank you for visiting Spokesman.com. To continue reading this story and enjoying our local journalism please subscribe or log in.

You have reached your article limit for this month.

Subscribe now and enjoy unlimited digital access to Spokesman.com

Unlimited Digital Access

Stay connected to Spokane for as little as 99¢!

Subscribe for access

Already a Spokesman-Review subscriber? Activate or Log in

You have reached your article limit for this month.

Subscribe now and enjoy unlimited digital access to Spokesman.com

Unlimited Digital Access

Stay connected to Spokane for as little as 99¢!

Subscribe for access

Already a Spokesman-Review subscriber? Activate or Log in

Oops, it appears there has been a technical problem. To access this content as intended, please try reloading the page or returning at a later time. Already a Spokesman-Review subscriber? Activate or Log in