Otago Daily Times

Race and French football

The success of the French football team masks underlying tensions over race and class, writes Joseph Downing, Marie Curie Fellow, CNRS, Mediterran­ean Laboratory of Sociology, AixMarseil­le University.

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FRANCE is toasting its football team, and celebratin­g its diversity, following its victory in the World Cup, but out of the limelight and the glare of success in Russia a question continues to dog French football — the role of race and class in the selection of national players.

THE French football team has won the 2018 World Cup, 20 years after it triumphed on home soil in

1998. “Les Bleus”, as they are called, are back in the nation’s good books, celebrated for their excellent performanc­e in this year’s tournament, right through to the 42 win over Croatia in the final.

Out of the limelight and the glare of success in Russia 2018, however, a question continues to dog French football – the role of race and class in the selection of national players.

On the surface, this may seem strange with the attention given to the multicultu­ral harmony of the 1998 World Cupwinning team. The straightta­lking former captain of the French national team, Zinedine Zidane, recently said of his country’s 1998 win: ‘‘It was not about religion, the colour of your skin, we didn’t care about that, we were just together and enjoyed the moment.’’

This echoed the sentiment of the times, that a multicultu­ral team of united “black, blanc, beur” (black, white or Arab) players had united under the cause of the French national team to lift the World Cup for the first time.

Triumph, on the football field, demonstrat­ed that integratio­n had been successful in France and anyone could reach the top of French society.

Zidane, the star of France’s 1998 World Cupwinning team, was born to Berber Algerian parents. He grew up in Marseille’s infamous “La Castellane” estate, seen as one of the toughest estates in one of France’s toughest cities. Two decades later, Kylian Mbappe – a 19yearold of Cameroonia­n and Algerian heritage – who grew up in the Bondy suburbs of Paris, is the star of the French team.

Some commentato­rs have discussed the 2018 success of Les Bleus as a return to the joys of “black, blanc, beur” multicultu­ral national celebratio­n, acceptance and celebratio­n of ethnic diversity. Yet others have been critical of the way politics, integratio­n and football have been mixed together again.

Farright opportunis­m

Zidane and Mbappe bookend a couple of decades where the ethnic makeup of the national team has come under fierce scrutiny, often taking worringly racist forms.

Questions about the French team’s ethnic credential­s were present even before their 1998 victory against Brazil. The farright leader of the Front National (FN), JeanMarie Le Pen, argued that some in the team were “foreigners” who did not know how to sing the national anthem. When Le Pen made it to the second round of the presidenti­al election in 2002, some of the World Cupwinning footballer­s, including the captain, Marcel Desailly, campaigned hard against him.

In 2010, the French team crashed out of the World Cup in South Africa at the group stage, winning no games. Behind the scenes, the manager, Raymond Domenech, had terrible relations with the players, obscenitie­s were screamed and the captain, Patrice Evra, had an onfield bustup with the fitness coach, Robert Duverne. Rather than question the incompeten­ce of these two white coaches in managing the national side, blame fell quickly on the players, whose commitment to the French team was questioned.

The criticism went further than the usual rumblings about spoilt and overpaid players, taking on a distinctly sinister and racial tone when the philosophe­r Alain Finkielkra­ut called the team a “gang of thieves with mafia morals”. While this referred to the footballer­s by their presumed class background­s as children of France’s crimeridde­n, suburban housing estates, some pointed to a racial undertone as these estates are also synonymous with black and Arab youths.

Marine Le Pen, the new leader of the FN party – since then renamed Rassemblem­ent National – waded into the fray arguing that the problem with the national team was down to them having “another nationalit­y in their hearts”.

In the years since, there have been other accusation­s that France operated a “quota” to limit the number of black and Arab players in the national team. In part, this was justified as a means to limit the number of binational players trained by the French youth team, who may choose to play for a country other than France. However, transcript­s which formed part of an investigat­ion found the rationale also extended to racial stereotype­s that white players were more “cerebral” and “team orientated” than their “fast and strong” African and Arab counterpar­ts.

Notable by his absence in this World Cup is Karim Benzema, an internatio­nal star with Real Madrid who has been continuall­y left out of the squad, for what he has called “racist” reasons. Benzema was suspended from the national team in 2015 due to a criminal investigat­ion into an alleged blackmail case – which remains ongoing – and he was again omitted from the 2018 squad.

The official reason for his continued absence is “sporting choices”, but former French internatio­nal Samir Nasri went on record in 2017 to say the reason might have a more racist rationale.

Banlieue boys

The aftermath of the 2010 debacle demonstrat­ed that even for those who do make it to the top of French football, when times are hard it is they who are viewed first and foremost with suspicion due to their minority ethnic and working class background­s from les banlieues (suburbs).

These areas continue to have massive structural problems that disadvanta­ge those of minority and lowincome background­s.

In the 20 years since Zidane lifted the World Cup, little has changed in the estate outside Marseille where he grew up. Like other estates in France that house significan­t numbers of those of foreign ethnic origin, La Castellane continues to be gripped by violence and the alltoo lucrative drugs trade, which periodic raids do little to disrupt.

The achievemen­ts of 1998 and 2018 demonstrat­e that players such as Zidane and Mbappe from ethnic minority background­s can rise to the top of French society.

Some players transcend football, taking up bigger political causes, such as the French 1998World Cupwinning defender Lillian Thuram who has worked against discrimina­tion in France. He even turned down a position in the Government of Nicolas Sarkozy because of difference­s with the president over his stance on social issues and because Sarkozy called the rioters of 2005 “scum” when he was interior minister.

Yet while the current team is riding high on a wave of the resurrecti­on of “black, blanc, beur” success, French football, like French society, remains marred by complex forms of racial discrimina­tion. — theconvers­ation.com

Zidane and Mbappe bookend a couple of decades where the ethnic makeup of the national team has come under fierce scrutiny, often taking worryingly

racist forms

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Can’t dampen these spirits . . . France’s Adil Rami kisses the trophy as he celebrates with teammates after winning the World Cup in Russia earlier this month.
PHOTO: REUTERS Can’t dampen these spirits . . . France’s Adil Rami kisses the trophy as he celebrates with teammates after winning the World Cup in Russia earlier this month.

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