Off the pitch, Morocco emerges a winner in the World Cup
By James M. Dorsey
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France defeated Morocco 2:0 on
the pitch, but off the pitch Morocco is up 4:0.
Ultimately, the effects of Morocco’s off-the-pitch success
may ripple much longer than the fallout of its stellar performance in the
stadium.
To be sure, Morocco shares its off-the-pitch success
with others, including France, its on-the-pitch history-laden rival, as well as
Qatar and Qatari activists.
Migration
helped make both teams what they are, one of the world's top four soccer
squads.
The symbolism
was not lost on the day four people died when a boat carrying dozens of
would-be migrants from France to Britain capsized in the English Channel.
The incident boosted calls for policies that offer
migrants safe and legal pathways rather than focus primarily
on law enforcement and border protection.
Imagine that France and Morocco had duelled four days
later on December 18, International Migrants Day and the day of France’s World
Cup final against Argentina. The symbolism would have been even starker.
Even so, the Morocco-France match added texture to the
identity aspect of the migration debate and the symbolism of Morocco's on and
off-the-pitch performance.
Many Moroccans and non-Moroccans took pride and joy in
the North African state’s Cinderella-like march through the tournament against
the backdrop of colonial history, decades of Islam having been put post-9/11 on
the defensive amid rising Islamophobia, and as an expression of the rebalancing
of global power between West and East.
“Morocco’s
semifinal pairing with France has…taken on outsized geopolitical dimensions, seemingly pitting the once
colonized against its former colonizer, the Global South taking on the Global
North, East against West, David versus Goliath,” said Paul Silverstein, an
anthropologist, focused on North Africa.
On one
level, the support of a predominantly Muslim Arab and African nation
constituted a rejection of militant, politically violent expressions of Islam
that sought to exploit the World Cup to divide rather than bring people
together in a fleeting moment of solidarity.
An Islamic State poster accusing Jews and
Christians of using sports to distract Muslims from waging jihad failed to resonate
with fans in Doha and elsewhere.
Sports scholar Mahfoud Amara and political scientist Youcef
Bouandel noted that “even the
most radical and conservative wings in Islam have not been successful
in distancing these populations with their (quasi–religious) passion for
football. Which for many is one of the few sources of entertainment when
confronted with daily socio-economic difficulties.”
Likewise, the empathy with Morocco’s sporting success
and spotlighting of the Palestinian cause fuelled rather than resolved debates
about Moroccan identity, visible gaps between Arab elites and publics, and
rivalries among Gulf states that continue to play out despite an end to open
animosity.
Amazighs or Berbers account for 40
per cent of the Moroccan population. They saw their identity buried under the
Arab African label. To assert themselves, Amazighs celebrated Mr. El Kajoui’s gesture on social media, prompting discussion about whether Morocco is
an Arab country.
The
complexity of the identity issue at times sparked confusion.
In one
incident, in a twist of irony, Qatari security prevented
fans from bringing
the blue, green, and yellow Amazigh tricolour into the stadium in the mistaken
belief that it represented the LGBTQ rainbow.
In another, Moroccan striker Hakim Ziyech listened,
impatiently drumming his fingers, to a journalist asking questions in Arabic. A
speaker of Dutch, English, and Tarfit, a Berber language, Mr. Ziyech responded,
"Now in English, please."
Most Moroccans
speak darija, a spoken rather than a written language widely classified as an
Arabic dialect that most Arabic speakers beyond the Maghreb, the western part
of North Africa that also includes Algeria, Libya, Mauritania, and Tunisia, are
unable to understand.
As a result,
BeIn, the Qatari sports broadcaster, adds Arabic subtitles when it broadcasts interviews
with darija-speaking Moroccan players and fans.
As genuine
as World Cup fans’ support of the Palestinians was, the emergence
of Palestine as a touchstone for the gap between elites and public opinion
constituted a throwback to the days when Palestinians were a lightning rod for
widespread frustration with non-performing, autocratic Arab regimes.
In a subtle, or perhaps not so subtle way, Palestine served
Qatar’s purpose.
It allowed Qatar to point the finger
at its Gulf rivals, particularly the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. These
two Arab states were at the forefront of the 3.5-year-long UAE-Saudi-led
economic and diplomatic boycott of the Gulf state that was lifted in early 2021
and recognized Israel in 2020.
To be sure, the
subtext of animosity encountered by Israelis in Qatar was a far cry from the
call on Muslims by the Islamic
State to "cut…(the) necks of Christians and Jews and
kick their heads through the battlefields… rather
than surrender your heads to be played with in the soccer arenas.”
Implicitly, fans were taking to task those governments
that had recognised Israel for failing to link normalisation to resolving the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
In doing so, the fans
unwittingly projected Qatar as a more open society. They further positioned the
Gulf state as being on the right side of
history by refusing to normalize relations with Israel before the Jewish state
engaged in a constructive solution to the Palestinian problem.
Qatari
tolerance of public support for the Palestinians contrasted starkly with the UAE’s banning of critics from travel and restrictions on expressing
pro-Palestinian sentiment in Bahrain.
Emphasis on
the Palestinians allowed Qatar to portray itself as a country that enables
civil society, albeit only if groups align themselves with the Gulf state’s
policies and only when the timing of their activities suits the government.
One group
that played a key role in galvanizing fan support for the Palestinians, Qatar
Youth Opposed to Normalization (QAYON), discovered that early on as the government sought to bend the group to its will through
coercion and intimidation.
Founded in
2011 at the time of Qatari support for popular revolts in the region, QAYON saw
in the World Cup an opportunity to bolster its campaign against engaging with
Israel.
The government
rejected the group’s initial World Cup-related demand that it bars Israelis
from attending the tournament in violation of the rules of world soccer body
FIFA.
FIFA obliges
host countries to allow fans to attend a World Cup irrespective of whether they
are from nations the tournament host does not recognise or is at odds with the
host country.
Nevertheless,
in contrast to spectators whom Qatari security prevented from wearing to
matches OneLove armbands favouring LGBTQ rights, a sensitive issue in Qatar, or
paraphernalia in support of anti-government protesters in Iran, authorities did
nothing to stop QAYON from galvanizing fans attending the World Cup.
Qatar
justified its banning of the OneLove armband and anti-Iranian paraphernalia by
pointing to FIFA’s ban on all political expression on the pitch.
It’s unclear
whether FIFA extended the ban to the pro-Palestine campaign or whether Qatar
chose to ignore the FIFA rule selectively.
In the final
analysis, Qatar, unlike Morocco, never made it out of the World Cup's group
stage. But like Morocco, it emerges from the World Cup, an off-the-pitch
winner.
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Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow
at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of
Middle East Soccer.
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