Identity politics shape Middle Eastern and North African soccer
Hany Ramzy: The exception that confirms the rule
By James M. Dorsey
Hany Ramzy returned to Egypt from this month’s London
Olympics a soccer hero and a model in a country and a region in which identity
politics rather national identity often governs the beautiful game.
A Coptic Christian and one-time legendary national soccer
team captain in a squad whose former national coach Hassan Shehata established
Muslim piety as a criterion for membership equal to skill, Mr. Ramzy, the coach
of Egypt’s Olympic soccer team, symbolizes what is possible as well as the
immense problems Middle Eastern and North African nations have in coming to
grips with their ethnic and religious minorities.
Popular uprisings in the past year in countries like Syria
and Bahrain have turned sectarian as are protests in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern
Province and the fallout of the insurgency in Syria in neighbouring countries
like Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq that have sectarian or ethnic overtones.
Soccer teams across the region in Iran, Israel, Iraqi Kurdistan, Egypt,
Algeria, Palestine and Jordan are often as much about sports as they are about
identity.
Mr. Ramzy led his team to the quarterfinals in London
against the backdrop of a popular revolt that forced president Hosni Mubarak to
resign after 30 years in office and 18 months of political volatility and
violence. In one incident last October, 28 people, mostly Copts, were killed
and 212 injured when security forces and the military attacked demonstrators
protesting against the demolition of a church in Upper Egypt.
“Egypt’s participation in the Olympics could not be more
symbolic of the role sports plays as a means to regain national pride and
social unity,” said journalist Mustafa Abdelhalim in an analysis published by Common
Ground that was as much about hope as it was about reality.
To be sure, Copts play in Egyptian premier league teams as
do Kurds in Iraqi squads, Palestinians in Israel, Berbers in Algeria and Azeris
in Iran. Mr. Ramzy is credited with Egypt’s winning of the 1998 Africa Cup of
Nations championship. And the Egyptian national team has no doubt abandoned its
religious discrimination under its current coach, American Bob Bradley.
Yet, major teams in the region, including Traktorsazi in the
Iranian province of Eastern Azerbaijan, Bnei Sakhnin and Beitar Jerusalem in
Israel and Jeunesse Kabyle in Algeria as well as the national teams of Iraqi
Kurdistan and Palestine are key tools in projecting national or sectarian
identities. So are the at times violent protests of their supporters.
Mr. Ramzy, one of the few if not the only Coptic Egyptian
national team player in past decades, is the exception that proves the rule in
a country in which the Coptic Church has its own Copts-only soccer league believed
to include hundreds of clubs and some 10,000 players. Mr. Ramzy is believed to
owe his success to a significant extent to the fact that he earned prestige by
being hired by various European teams, including Neuchâtel Xamax, Werder Bremen
and Kaiserslautern.
“In Egypt, there is a problem that many people don't even
consider. This problem relates to not allowing the Copts to play in the
national teams of sports, especially soccer which is the most popular game in
Egypt. Marginalization of young Copts by the Football Association and the
administrations of Egyptian clubs resulted in having no Coptic players in the
core teams. Youth teams have very few Copts and they are laid off as soon as
they reach certain age and never take the chance to promote,” says Safwat
Freeze Ghali, writing on the website of Copts United.
Charging that soccer discrimination against Copts encourages
discrimination by Muslims and anger and hate among Copts, who account for some
10 per cent of all Egyptians, Mr. Ghali speaks out of personal experience.
“I suffered from this problem with my son who was born in
1995 and has a great talent in soccer. Many people have said so after they saw
him playing. My son then started in a small club, but never took a chance to
play. His coach treats him so badly and his colleagues make fun of his
Christian name. His coach told him: I won't let you touch the ball (play in the
team) and never ask me why! We got fed up and I took him to a bigger club and
they liked him very much and promised to recruit him but they never did. Then,
I moved him to another club where they liked him too, but when the coach knew
his name (a Christian name), he said: We'll see, later!,” Mr. Ghali wrote.
Under the leadership of Hassan Shehata, a legendary pro-Mubarak
coach who resigned last year after leading Egypt to three successive African
titles, the unwritten rule was that only practicing Muslims could join the national
team. Players prayed before games for God’s intervention and offered up prayers
of thanks for goals and victories. To join the team, players had to pass a
religious a pious behaviour litmus test alongside demonstrating their soccer
skills. “Without it, we will never select any player regardless of his
potential,” Mr. Shehata, who dumped a talented player for visiting a nightclub
rather than a mosque, was quoted as saying. “I always strive to make sure that
those who wear the Egypt jersey are on good terms with God.” Mr. Shehata’s
statements and policy sparked furore but no change.
At the time, it apparently never occurred to Mr. Sheheta
that his righteous squad may have lost its critical 2010 World Cup qualifier
game because God loves Algeria and its team too. It seemingly also never
occurred to world soccer body FIFA to stop a dangerous trend in its tracks.
Imagine what would happen if other national teams had follow Egypt’s example;
if England had insisted that its players worship in the Church of England;
Italy made Catholicism the team’s central tenet; Germany booted all Turkish
Muslims off the field; Japan played only
Buddhists; and Israel declared itself a Jewish team for a Jewish state and
exiled its Arab players. Not to speak of the limitations it would put on recruiting
top players.
“In June 2012 London’s Wembley Stadium was the site of a ‘faith
and football’ day that united students from Muslim, Christian and Jewish
schools. This event was planned by the Three Faiths Forum (3FF), a UK-based
organization dedicated to building relationships between people of all faiths,
and the UK Football Association, which officially oversees the sport in the
country. Egyptians could replicate this example by creating nationwide leagues
to promote intergroup and interfaith cooperation. These teams could include
anyone who wants to participate in the sport and make Egyptians’ shared
interest in sports a tool for a more inclusive society,” suggests Mr.
Abdelhalim.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam
School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in
Singapore and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East
Soccer.
The lack of Copts playing at the club level indeed is reflective of deeper problems of religious discrimination in Egypt. Sadly, the sport all Egyptians love is the subject of continuous, non-sporting interventions, intentionally holding back its transformation potential. http://balasticman.blogspot.it/2012/09/christians-muslims-and-soccer-in-egypt.html
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