MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Ramallah was unnaturally quiet the evening of August 26.

As the clock struck 11:00 pm, an explosion of cheers, chants, car horns, and shooting shattered the silence.

Following the initial shock reaction, I wondered whether the Israelis had decided to surprise us and implement a unilateral withdrawal from the occupied territories.

Nothing other than total liberation is capable of evoking such collective expressions of jubilation, I thought.

Upon investigation, it turned out that the Palestinian soccer team had qualified for the semi-finals in the Arab championships being held in Amman, Jordan.

Having defeated the UAE team (1-0) and evened out with the Libyan (2-2) and the Syrian (1-1) teams, the Palestinian national soccer team had gained the five points necessary for the semi-finals.

Despite the obvious implications of “settling scores” with such results, the national euphoria encapsulates the essence of complex existential, national, political, historical, psychological and emotional realities.

The Palestinian team is a collection of amateurs playing in several teams without any serious financial support or services.

Prior to the championships, they had no chance of meeting and practicing together due to the closure of the Palestinian territories, the separation of Gaza and the West Bank, the siege and isolation of Jerusalem, and travel restrictions on Palestinian players from other Arab countries.

The players are the children of the intifada and the sons of refugee camp dwellers. Some of them come from the Jerusalem team. All of them have never enjoyed the care and attention of professional trainers or even the luxury of a regular soccer field.

Most have gained their skills in neighborhood alleys or empty lots, kicking the ball around with more enthusiasm than discipline, more gusto than strategy.

Thus, when the team arrived in Amman, they were received with sympathy, patronage, and sometimes condescending back patting.

The obvious underdogs, they were perceived by other contenders as the easy pass to the next level—the guaranteed points for the other team.

That is how many in the Arab world, and the world at large, would like to see the Palestinians--deprived, deficient, and discriminated against, hence deserving of pity and patronage. Dare they demand parity and practice dignity, then they’re guilty of breaking the mold and defying stereotypes.

The weakness of the Palestinians has been a convenient source of gratification for others, an assurance of instant superiority.

The soccer team displayed spirit and determination. They took the others by surprise. They had the nerve to defy expectations and to transform themselves from the underdog to top dog.

Hence they shifted the terrain of their rivals from pity to fear. And they insisted on winning respect and admiration.

Which explains the tinge of wistfulness in the exuberance of the public celebrations.

If only, many were thinking and saying, if only we could transpose this reality to the peace process.

Victimized, humiliated, exploited, and oppressed the Palestinians have been forced to pay the price of power politics, having been on the receiving end of an unjust and painful peace process.

Besieged--their land confiscated, their homes demolished, their prisoners manipulated, their economy decimated, they had long yearned to break free.

Even those who had never played or even watched a soccer game before became instant experts as they followed the minutest detail of the drama unfolding on the soccer field in Amman.

Their team was scoring! Defiant and daring, the Palestinian team had claimed the freedom and the right to excel.

Out there in the sunshine, they were relishing the recognition and acclaim of the spectators, and vindicating their own people’s confidence as well as their identity.

Comparisons were made with the dismal performance of a prolonged and protracted process of negotiations and diminution.

Endless meetings in dark rooms, diminishing expectations, deteriorating conditions, and a refrain of hollow statements and disclaimers have obscured the real issues and the sun.

In the words of the prominent columnist Hassan al-Battal, “the ball is much more elusive than the side with whom we’re negotiating and the soccer balance of power is no less askew.”

The soccer ball, al-Battal adds, “has ignited a conflagration in the imagination of the rising generation—victory-making is possible.” Whether in war or in negotiations, the soccer team has shown that the elusive ball can be “tamed.”

Such is the “culture of joy” for which the Palestinian spirit has been yearning.

It is also a culture of collective pride and recognition and a statement of assertion.

When a Palestinian excels, he/she is committing “national affirmation” of the first degree, particularly defiant in the face of denial and negation.

We collectively lay claim to Edward Said’s brilliance in the realm of ideas and the intellect and to Mahmoud Darwish’s imagination and poetic creativity. We relish the economic ingenuity and successes of Hassib Sabbagh, Abdel-Muhsin Qattan, Said Khoury, Abdel-Majid Shuman, Sabih al-Masri and others. We revel in the successes of legal brains such as Eugene Qutran, George Salem, and Michel Abdel-Massih.

That his how a collective and incremental national identity, as well as a spirit of affirmation and dignity, is expressed and celebrated.

The soccer team dared to laugh out loud and in public. They openly rejected defeat, victimization, and the silence of prolonged pain.

The remarkable goalkeeper Lu’ai Husni from al-Am’ari refugee camp is already a legend. He has been adopted and internalized by the national ethos.

So has Ziad al-Kurd from Jerusalem. His dramatic goal has already become the symbol of triumph.

Indeed, the Palestinians are displaying their joy with abandon. It doesn’t matter what the results of the coming games will be. Our team has already won the championship for us.

This is the championship that counts—in which the human spirit prevails and the right to be equal is claimed.

The triumph is that of the will to endure and the legitimization of the culture of joy.

The politics of soccer may have been the most apparent dimension of the game. The game, however, has been played in earnest and beyond defeat at all levels.

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