The Pak Banker

A cup of plenty

- Zarrar Khuhro

In the eighth century, Arab armies crossed from what is now Morocco into Spain, conquering the Visigoths and establishi­ng the Ummayad Caliphate of Córdoba. Flushed with victory, they then ventured into France, only to be defeated by Charles Martel's Franks at the Battle of Tours in 732 AD.

Basically, it's pretty much the same story we saw in the 2022 football World Cup, where Morocco defeated Spain but went on to lose to France, which proves, once again, that history does indeed rhyme.

But, win or lose, this was certainly Morocco's coming-out party and an incredibly cute one at that: players brought their mothers onto the field to celebrate with them, and in one particular­ly heartwarmi­ng clip, the infant son of Moroccan footballer 'Bono' could be seen trying to take a bite from the mic used to interview his sportsman father, thinking it was some kind of ice cream cone.

The fact that the World Cup was held in Qatar, and that an Arab team made it this far, has certainly been a source of pride for the Muslim world in general and the Arab world in particular. That's especially significan­t, given the campaign waged against Qatar's hosting the event in some sections of the internatio­nal media, and concerns over how 'inclusive' this event would be, given Qatar's laws and regulation­s.

Many of these concerns, such as the state of migrant labour in the Gulf state, were indeed legitimate; but much of it - and the context in which it was presented - smacked of pearl-clutching and hypocritic­al virtue-signalling. The emptiness of these gestures, such as BBC's refusal to air the opening ceremony of the Cup and instead running with a long-winded condemnati­on of Qatar, is evident in the fact that the same BBC refuses to even discuss the extent of Qatari investment­s in the UK, or the fact that British government­s bends over backwards to seek the said investment while eagerly selling weapons to Qatar and other Gulf states.

But the BBC still comes out looking better than a Danish TV channel, where the host held up a picture of monkeys hugging and compared that to the way Moroccan players were hugging their families.

Apart from projecting Morocco and Qatar even further on the global stage, the Cup also succeeded in inadverten­tly highlighti­ng the Palestinia­n cause, even if this was perhaps not a desired outcome by the host country. The voices raised did not come from the Arab states, who have notably been normalisin­g relations with Israel, but from the Arab fans who flocked to Doha.

In video after video, we saw interview requests from Israeli journalist­s being mockingly denied by Arab fans, who also made sure to raise proPalesti­nian slogans and wave Palestinia­n flags whenever they saw an Israeli TV crew.

On the field, Moroccan players also prominentl­y displayed the Palestinia­n flag, something that was condemned by sections of the German media as 'antiSemiti­c'. Granted, the German media and state tend to be more Israeli than the Israelis, having sublimated their guilt over the Holocaust into all-out support for Israel and (as a corollary) opposition to the Palestinia­n cause; but even then, some of the commentary was beyond ridiculous. Take the gesture of the Moroccan team of raising the index finger of their right hand in the shahada, meant to symbolise the oneness of God. It was wilfully misinterpr­eted by a German TV channel as expressing support for IS terrorists.

Much to the chagrin of Israel and its apologists, support for Palestine wasn't limited to Arab fans, as Brazilian fans also raised the Palestinia­n flag from the bleachers, and English fans also caught onto the trend of shouting "free Palestine" while being interviewe­d by Israeli journalist­s. Typically, there was a lot of hand-wringing about this 'disgracefu­l' behaviour in Israel and, as if to prove their relative moral superiorit­y, Israeli police beat up Palestinia­ns who were celebratin­g Morocco's win. As for journalist­s' treatment, who in the West knows or cares about the murder of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh at the hands of Israel? Who cares about Basil Faraj, Yaser Murtaja, Khaled Hamad, James Miller, Issam al Talawi, Nazih Darwazeh, Ahmed Abu Hussein and all the other journalist­s killed by Israel with utter impunity, not to mention the Palestinia­ns, young and old, who regularly face Israeli bullets and bombs?

It's a cliché to say that sport brings people together, but clichés are often true. In this case, we can see that truth on display in the reaction of fans from around the world, who were bowled over by the show put on by the host country.

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