-----Original Message-----
From: Portside Moderator [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, January 31, 2011 6:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [SPAM] Soccer Clubs Central to Ending Egypt's "Dictatorship of
Fear"


Soccer Clubs Central to Ending Egypt's "Dictatorship of
Fear" 

by Dave Zirin

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/dave_zirin/01/31/egypt.soccer/
index.html


Over the decades that have marked the tenure of Egypt's "President for Life"
Hosni Mubarak, there has been one consistent nexus for anger, organization,
and practical experience in the ancient art of street fighting: the
country's soccer clubs. Over the past week, the most organized, militant fan
clubs, also known as the "ultras," have put those years of experience to
ample use.

Last Thursday, the Egyptian Soccer Federation announced
that they would be suspending all league games
throughout the country in an effort to keep the soccer
clubs from congregating. Clearly this was a case of too
little, too late. Even without games, the football fan associations have
been front and center organizing everything from the neighborhood committees
that have been providing security for residents, to direct confrontation
with the state police. In an interview with Al Jazeera, Alaa Abd El Fattah,
a prominent Egyptian blogger said, "The ultras -- have played a more
significant role than any political group on the ground at this moment."
Alaa then joked, "Maybe we should get the ultras to rule the country."

The involvement of the clubs has signaled more than
just the intervention of sports fans. The soccer clubs'
entry into the political struggle also means the entry
of the poor, the disenfranchised, and the mass of young
people in Egypt for whom soccer was their only outlet.

As soccer writer James Dorsey wrote this week, "The
involvement of organized soccer fans in Egypt's
anti-government protests constitutes every Arab
government's worst nightmare. Soccer, alongside Islam,
offers a rare platform in the Middle East, a region
populated by authoritarian regimes that control all
public spaces, for the venting of pent-up anger and frustration."

Dorsey's statement proved prophetic on Sunday when it
was announced that Libya's government had instructed
the Libyan Football Federation to ban soccer matches
for the foreseeable future. Sources in the government
said that this was done to head off the mere
possibility that Egypt's demonstrations could spill
over the border. The fear was that soccer could be the
artery that would connect the challenge to Mubarak to a challenge to former
U.S. foe turned ally Muammar al-Gaddafi.

The critical role of Egypt's soccer clubs may surprise
us, but only if we don't know the history that soccer
clubs have played in the country. For more than a
century, the clubs have been a place where cheering and anti-government
organizing have walked together in comfort. Egypt's most prominent team, Al
Ahly, started its club in 1907 as a place to organize national resistance
against British colonial rule. The word Al Ahly translated into English
means "the national," to mark their unapologetically political stance
against colonialism. Al Ahly has always been the team with the most
political fans. It's also a team that's allowed its players to make
political statements on the pitch even though this is in direct violation of
FIFA dictates. It's no coincidence that it was Al Ahly's star player Mohamed
Aboutrika, aka "the Smiling Assassin," who in 2008 famously raised his
jersey revealing the T-shirt, which read "Sympathize with Gaza."

Of course there are thousands in the streets of Egypt
that have no connection to the Ultras of Al Ahly or any
of the clubs in Egypt. But soccer clubs, whether in
Europe, Africa, Asia, or the Middle East, have a long
history as a place where anger, frustration and dissent
been channeled.

Sometimes it's been channeled toward ill-ends like
racist hooliganism or even as instruments of ethnic
cleansing during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Other
times, as in the Ivory Coast, it's been a tool for
unity during civil war. Even more than either of those
options, the soccer clubs have been a safety valve
where people have just let off steam.

Today in Egypt they're at the heart of a rich mosaic of resistance. They
stand as a remarkable example of the capacity that sports has to bring
people together. An anonymous member of Mubarak's ruling national party said
to the government newspaper, Al Ahram, on Wednesday, "What we saw on the
streets ... are not just Muslim Brotherhood members or sympathizers but
Egyptians at large; those are the Egyptians that you would see supporting
the football national team ? and their show of frustration was genuine and
it had to be accommodated." Pity the government official with the sense to
realize the enormity of the challenge in the streets and the naivete to
think it can be accommodated. The great author of Soccer in Sun and Shadow,
Eduardo Galeano, in a different time and different context once wrote, "The
Dictatorship of Fear is Over." Truer words about Egypt could never be
spoken.

[Dave Zirin is the author of "Bad Sports: How Owners
are Ruining the Games we Love" (Scribner) and just made
the new documentary "Not Just a Game." Receive his
column every week by emailing [email protected].
Contact him at [email protected].]

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