Gulf News

Kurds hail Swedish football club’s success

Founded by Kurdish immigrants, Dalkurd’s victory lifts spirits of a people facing violence in Turkey and Iraq

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Weary of war, persecutio­n and statelessn­ess, Kurds rejoiced as a Swedish football club founded just 13 years ago by Kurdish immigrants won a promotion to the top division.

Scores of cheering fans ran onto the pitch, dancing and waving Kurdish flags last week when Dalkurd FF beat Gothenburg’s GAIS 1-0 to earn a seat in next season’s Allsvenska­n.

Midfielder Rawez Lawan, 30, scored the only goal 59 minutes into the game at the Domnarvsva­llen Stadium in the central Swedish city of Borlange on October 28.

“Millions of Kurds are dancing with joy ... it’s so wonderful to give them this happiness,” Lawan told TT news agency after the match.

“This means more than just football.”

Silver lining

Dalkurd’s victory lifted spirits among Kurds dishearten­ed by the continued violence in Kurdish populated areas of Turkey and the aftermath of the controvers­ial independen­ce referendum in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region.

“I was very happy when I saw their great results,” Ahmad Karim, a 35-year-old resident in Arbil, the capital of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan, told AFP.

The Kurds are a non-Arab ethnic group numbering between 25 and 35 million spread across four countries — southeast Turkey, northern Syria, Iraq and Iran — without a recognised state of their own.

“I hope they will represent Kurdish sport globally, because we in the Middle East do not have our own Kurdish [national] team,” Karim added.

The fallout from last month’s vote caused weeks of armed clashes in which Baghdad reasserted control over swathes of oil-rich Kurdish-held territory and triggered the region’s president Masoud Barzani to step down.

Arslan Abdallah, a sports journalist at the Kurdish Rudaw television channel based in Arbil, said the team’s success is “a huge victory for Kurdish athletes in Europe” and in his region.

Driven by nature

The remarkable rise of the squad, which includes Americans, a Palestinia­n and a Gambian, is built on their defiant personalit­ies, according to their assistant coach Amir Azrafshan.

“They all have something in common when it comes to enjoying a challenge ... they’re driven by pressure,” he told AFP.

The club was formed in 2004 in the central Swedish province of Dalarna, around 300km northwest of Stockholm, as a social project to help troubled youth integrate into society.

It “gives hope to us immigrants in Sweden that we can succeed,” author and social commentato­r Kurdo Baksi said.

Swedish daily Aftonblade­t reported in February 2016 that 49 per cent of the club was bought by the two Kurdish “billionair­e brothers” Kawa and Sarkat Junad.

“We want to win and be in the highest division as quickly as possible. I would love to see Dalkurd in the Champions League,” Sarkat Junad told Aftonblade­t at the time.

 ?? AFP ?? Supporters and players of Dalkurd FF celebrate after the club’s promotion to Swedish football’s top division after their victory against Gothenburg’s GAIS on October 28.
AFP Supporters and players of Dalkurd FF celebrate after the club’s promotion to Swedish football’s top division after their victory against Gothenburg’s GAIS on October 28.

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