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Many Egyptian Christians feel left out of World Cup

Team’s return to global tournament hasn’t been entirely unifying, some say

- HAMZA HENDAWI

ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA Egypt’s first World Cup in 28 years has captivated the soccer-crazy nation, with intense focus on the squad and the broader game.

The Egyptians played the first match of the tournament June 15 and held two-time World Cup winner Uruguay scoreless for 89 minutes until conceding a late goal and losing 1-0.

Still, the performanc­e — with star striker Mohamed Salah injured on the sidelines — attracted internatio­nal praise and gripped the millions of people gathering in groups across Egypt to watch their team together.

It was a welcome distractio­n for Egyptians who are struggling under harsh economic conditions. The 3-1 loss in the next match to host Russia, even with Salah back in the lineup, ended Egypt’s chances of advancing beyond the group stage. Despite the loss, the love and respect enjoyed by the team and the players remained intact.

Yet it wasn’t an entirely unifying experience.

For the country’s Christians, about 10 per cent of the population, the compositio­n of the team and the way the squad was perceived highlighte­d what they believe is a problem with the sport in Egypt.

No Christian has been on the national soccer squad for more than a decade, and just one played for any of the 18 top-flight clubs last season.

Egyptian coaches and officials dismiss any suggestion of discrimina­tion, but Christians disagree. Egypt’s Christian spiritual leader has broken the church’s silence on the issue by publicly complainin­g about their disproport­ionate representa­tion in the sport.

Egypt’s all-Muslim World Cup squad is known for being pious. The team even chose to make its World Cup base in Muslim Chechnya. The national squad has been nicknamed the prostrator­s because the players offer a Muslim prayer when they score. They regularly pray together when in camp and read the opening verse of the Qur’an before kickoff. Some perform the Muslim ritual wash before games. Generally, they frame competitio­n, wins and defeats in religious terms.

Hassan Shehatah, one of Egypt’s most successful coaches, said nearly a decade ago that, to him, a player’s religious piety was as important as his skills. Hassan led an all-Muslim squad to win three of Egypt’s seven African titles between 2006 and 2010.

When goalkeeper Ahmed Elshenawy was named man of the match against Uruguay, he refused the Budweiser-sponsored award on religious grounds.

The perceived exclusion of Christians from top-flight soccer and the national team is at odds with the outreach to the ancient community by Abdel-Fattah elSissi, Egypt’s general-turnedpres­ident who led the military’s 2013 ouster of an Islamist president. El-Sissi has emphatical­ly and repeatedly spoken about inclusion and sectarian harmony. However, his government, critics and some Christians say, has failed to shield the community from the day-to-day discrimina­tion, particular­ly in rural areas with less state authority and religious tolerance.

Pope Tawadros II, head of the Orthodox Coptic Christians and a close el-Sissi ally, rarely speaks publicly of discrimina­tion, but has recently waded into the issue with uncustomar­y bluntness. “It’s extraordin­ary that all of Egypt’s football teams don’t have a single Copt who has good legs and who kicked a ball on the streets when he was little,” he said.

Ahmed Hossam, a retired striker — and a Muslim who played for some of Europe’s biggest clubs — was more blunt.

He claimed in a recent television interview that youth team coaches were driving Christians away.

“Regrettabl­y, there’s a lot of people in Egypt who are bigoted over colour, religion and ethnicity,” said Hossam, better known as Mido. “We must confront them and not bury our heads in the sand. Can you believe it that in the history of football in Egypt, only five Christians played at the top level?”

As the only Christian on his soccer youth team, Ramon Zhery says he tried everything he could to blend in with his teammates. At the end, it was not enough. Zhery, now 28, plays for a third division club in southern Egypt. He says discrimina­tion against his faith kept him from rising further. Speaking to The Associated Press, Zhery recounted how he tried to establish harmony with his teammates and reassure them that, though a Christian, he was just another player like them.

When they huddled before kickoff to recite the Qur’an’s opening verse — a ritual meant to serve as a plea for divine help — he whispered a Christian prayer to himself. When at camp, he woke up before everyone and went about rousing them to perform the dawn prayers, one of five that Muslims offer daily.

“Mohamed Salah is a world star and he prostrates every time he scores and everyone knows he is a Muslim,” said Zhery.

The Christians’ response to their perceived exclusion from domestic soccer has been “church football” — a nationwide league of five-a-side teams that is played mostly on church grounds or rented pitches.

Andrew Raafat, a physical education teacher who tried his luck in club soccer before he settled for a coaching job at a Cairo Church, says some of the better young players he works with want to play at the top level.

“I cannot tell them that they will never be selected,” Raafat said. “They get selected sometimes, but they are later let go.”

Not everyone agrees. Retired internatio­nal midfielder Ismail Youssef, soccer director of Cairo’s Zamalek club, dismissed suggestion­s of discrimina­tion.

“I don’t think they are deliberate­ly excluded, the better ones among them get to play,” Youssef said. “There is no nepotism in football.”

 ?? KARIM JAAFAR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Mohamed Salah “prostrates every time he scores and everyone knows he is a Muslim.” Ten per cent of Egypt is Christian, but there are none on the national team.
KARIM JAAFAR/GETTY IMAGES Mohamed Salah “prostrates every time he scores and everyone knows he is a Muslim.” Ten per cent of Egypt is Christian, but there are none on the national team.

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