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Football Succeeds Where Politics Fails
by Ali al-Fadhily An Iraqi football victory seems to have united Iraqis across the country where politicians only divide it.
The Iraqi football team defeated South Korea 4-3 in Malaysia Wednesday to gain entrance into the finals of the Asian Cup. That set off a wave of celebrations across the capital and most of the country.
Tens of thousands of overjoyed Iraqis swarmed the streets of Baghdad, waving Iraqi flags and firing into the air to celebrate. Not even two car bombs that killed more than 50 people dampened all of the enthusiasm.
BAGHDAD, Jul 27 (IPS) - The football team is one of the last remaining symbols of
national unity, because it includes mixed sects and ethnicities -- a
rarity under an occupation that has fractured the country along ethnic
lines and along sects within Islam.
For a brief time it appeared that the people of Iraq suddenly had suddenly forgotten those differences.
"This
is a punch that came right in the nose of anyone who says we are
divided," Mahmood Farhan of the Iraqi Journalists League in Baghdad
told IPS. "Look how we swept off the dirt of occupation politics and,
hand in hand, won each other's love."
Iraqi security forces were
taken off guard by the spontaneous burst of celebrations, and for a
brief time the capital appeared the old, crowded, noisy Baghdad.
"Our
hearts beat together, and let the occupiers go to hell," shouted a
young man on a bicycle on the streets of the Sadr City area of the
capital. Many people gathered around the IPS correspondent when they
figured their celebrations were being reported to the outside world.
A
man who referred to himself as Hussein who was visiting Baghdad from
Basra, told IPS amidst the celebrating crowd in Sadr City: "Iraq only,
no Shias, no Sunnis and no Kurds. Down with divisions. Down with
sectarian attitudes."
Iraqis also crowded the streets of Basra
and other southern Iraqi cities. Around the country people sang the
song "Victory for Baghdad", composed by a group of non-Iraqi Arab
singers ten years before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003.
In
the semi-autonomous northern region Kurdistan people who now came
across as Iraqis and not just Kurds waved Iraqi flags in a rare display
of national unity. Kurds normally view the Iraqi flag as an Arab
symbol, and instead fly the Kurdish flag.
Iraqis outside the country also celebrated the victory.
"Dozens
of Iraqis have telephoned me to express their happiness and unity,"
Maki al-Nazzal, an Iraqi businessman in Amman told IPS on telephone.
"Arabs from Jordan and the Gulf countries who are in Amman celebrated
the winning as if it were their own.
"It seems that sports
achieved the unity of Iraqis and Arabs that politics has managed to
ruin," added Nazzal. "Two hours of football was far more fruitful than
four years of politics. Do not ask me whether this unity will last
long."
The same day the two car bombs went off amidst the
throngs of cheering Iraqis. The blasts came half an hour apart in
different areas of Baghdad. The killings did not end the celebrations
elsewhere.
"This is a game that Iraq won, and I hope Bush won't
now say, look, I made them win that match," a member of the Iraqi
Olympics Federation in Baghdad, speaking on condition of anonymity,
told IPS.
"He did it once and we hated him even more for that
because it was our boys who won despite the miserable support we are
getting from the Americans and our government," he said. He was
referring to the claim by U.S. President George W. Bush in August 2004
that the Iraqi football success in the Olympics was proof that the
U.S.-led occupation was benefiting Iraq.
At that time, Iraqi
football star Salih Sadir told reporters, "Iraq as a team doesn't want
Mr. Bush to use us (in an ad) for the presidential campaign...we don't
wish for the presence of the Americans in our country. We want them to
go away."
Iraq's football coach Adnan Hamad Majeed had then
said: "(My problems) are with what America has done in Iraq: destroy
everything. The American Army has killed so many people in Iraq."
On Sunday Iraq plays Saudi Arabia in the finals.
Ali al-Fadhily,
our correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with Dahr
Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who travels
extensively in the region.
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