
Photographer Honors Dad's Legacy at Tunisia World Cup
Hosni Manoubi is capturing Tunisia's World Cup journey through his lens, continuing a beautiful family tradition started by his father. Despite his team facing tough losses, he's there with camera in hand, keeping a decades-old passion alive.
When Hosni Manoubi points his camera at Tunisia's national team at the 2026 World Cup, he's doing more than just his job. He's walking in the footsteps of his father, who photographed sports for years before him.
Manoubi has traveled to multiple World Cups, documenting Tunisia's soccer journey across different continents and competitions. This year, he's capturing every moment as his team faces their biggest challenges yet on the world stage.
Tunisia heads into their final group match on Thursday after two difficult losses to Sweden and Japan. The team even changed coaches after their first defeat, adding extra pressure to an already intense tournament.
But Manoubi isn't just photographing wins and losses. He's preserving moments of national pride, athletic determination, and the dreams of millions of Tunisian fans watching from home.

His father built a career behind the lens, capturing the passion and drama of sports for readers who couldn't be in the stadium. Now Manoubi carries that torch forward, using modern equipment but the same love for the game.
Why This Inspires
Family legacies in creative fields remind us that passion can be inherited and transformed. Manoubi didn't just take over his father's job. He made it his own calling, traveling the world to document his country's soccer story.
In an era where everything moves fast and digital, there's something deeply human about a son honoring his father's craft. Every click of Manoubi's shutter connects past to present, father to son, and captures hope even when the scoreboard doesn't cooperate.
Sports photography demands patience, skill, and genuine love for the game. Manoubi brings all three, plus the added motivation of keeping a family tradition alive across generations.
Whether Tunisia advances or heads home Thursday, Manoubi will be there with his camera ready, doing what his father taught him to do: tell stories that matter.
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Based on reporting by France 24 English
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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