Syrian soccer star symbolizes games importance in protests


Syrian Studies Association Newsletter, Vol 17, No 1 (2012)

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Syrian soccer star symbolizes games importance in protests

James M. Dorsey

A celebrated national soccer team goalkeeper, singer of revolutionary folk songs and cheerleader of the uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the city of Homs, AbdelbassetSaroot is the exception that confirms the rule in a world in which soccer stars have largely stayed on the side lines of mass protests sweeping the Middle East and North Africa.

For much of the last year until Syrian forces loyal to Assad entered Homs in March 2012, Saroot led protests by crooning in the neighbourhood of Baba Amr. These days he leads the life of a marked man on the run rather than that of a feted and upcoming soccer star. He avoids daylight, travelling only at night. Constantly on the run, he never stops moving and stays at any one place at most a few days.

Three attempts on his life later[i] in which 12 people were killed, including his brother and some of his closest friends whose bodies were dumped on a street and crushed by tanks[ii], he recently called for NATO military intervention, and denounced Syrian exile opposition leaders for leading a life of luxury in five-star hotels and obstructing efforts to persuade the international community to intervene.[iii] Saroot was lying on a cot covered by a blanket as he recovered from injuries he allegedly suffered in the last attack.

More than a year into the rebellion against Assads rule, Saroot may have led a somewhat less perilous life had he not joined the rebellion, but probably not a more glamorous one. In a sign of the importance of soccer in Middle Eastern and North African politics in general and for the Assads embattled regime specifically, the government has unsuccessfully gone to great length to use the game as evidence that it remains in control and is functioning normally. As a result, players reputations have been tarnished both among those segments of soccer-crazy Syrian society that are opposed to Assad as well as internationally.

Syrias national soccer teams have flagrantly set rules aside in recent months in their line-ups to ensure success on the pitch in the hope that success on the soccer pitch would rub off on the regime. World soccer body FIFA in September 2011 barred Syria from competing for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil after the countrys national team fielded an ineligible player in in a qualifying match against Tajikistan.[iv] Lebanon accused Syria in November of fielding six players in an Under-19 Asian Football Championship qualifier whose ages had been falsified to qualify them for the team.[v]

By the same token, Syria refused to send athletes to the November 2011 Arab Games because it feared embarrassment if some of its sportsmen defected. Saroot is a living symbol that that fear may not be unfounded. It also suggests the problems the Assad regime has in ensuring that the countrys athletes toe the party line. Syrian security forces last summer arrested national soccer goalkeeper Mosab Balhous on charges of sheltering armed gangs and possessing suspicious amounts of money.[vi] Unconfirmed reports said a third soccer player, Ahmed al Sheban, was killed in Homs under unclear circumstances.

Saroot and Balhous stand out in a region in revolt, in which soccer players feted by autocratic leaders and managers appointed by their regimes remained largely on the side lines of mass anti-government protests. At the heart of their failure to join the popular revolts sweeping the Middle East and North Africa is what Palestinian-American historian Hisham Sharabi called neo-patriarchy in a controversial 1992 book[vii] that is still banned in many Arab countries.

Sharabi argued that Arab society was built around the dominance of the Father (patriarch), the center around which the national as well as the natural family are organized. Between ruler and ruled, between father and child, there exist only vertical relations: in both settings the paternal will is absolute will, mediated in both the society and the family by a forced consensus based on ritual and coercion.[viii]

In other words, according to Sharabis thesis, Arab regimes franchised repression so that in a cultural patrimonial society, the oppressed participated in their repression and denial of rights. The regime is in effect the father of all fathers at the top of the pyramid. As a result, the patriarchal values that dominate soccer in addition to its popularity made it the perfect game for neo-patriarchs. Their values were soccer's values: assertion of male superiority in most aspects of life, control or harnessing of female lust and a belief in a masculine God. The identification of the presidents of Egypt, Iran and Yemen – Hosni Mubarak, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Abdullah Ali Saleh – as well as Libyan leader Colonel Moammar Qaddafis son, Al Saadi, with their countrys national teams turned their successes and failures into barometers of how their regimes were faring. They also turned celebrated soccer players and managers into regime supporters who saw the autocrat as their father figure.

In Syria, that was all the more the case with the domination of soccer by the military and the police. The Syrian military and police own and operate two of the countrys most important teams; Al Jaish (The Army) was for the longest time virtually synonymous with the national team. National service was crucial to Al Jaishs success. The moment a talented young player came of age, the army conscripted him and he played for Al Jaish. By sucking up the league's talent they won honours and attracted huge crowds, while the other clubs had to keep a lid on their discontent. Professionalization has hit Al Jaish hard. Yet, its soccer training grounds are still designated as a military zone, its chairman is a general and its technical director a colonel.

Similarly, a senior military officer, General Mowaffak Joumaa, heads the Syrian Olympic Committee. Joumaa underlined the importance the Assad regime attributes to its association with sports by recently insisting that he was committed and determined to head the Syrian delegation to this summers London Olympics irrespective of calls for a banning of Syria.[ix] There is no question about it we are taking part in a official way and with the best quality of athletes here in Syria, Joumaa said. The International Olympic Committee (IOC), despite mounting British opposition, insisted in March that Syria would be at the Games despite the brutal government crackdown on protesters.

By joining the revolt Saroot and Balhous have become part of a small group of soccer players and officials in the Middle East and North Africa with popular uprisings. Libyan national team players waited four months after the eruption of protests against Qaddafi and joined only after relatives and friends of theirs were killed by pro-government forces. In Bahrain, players joined because as Shiite Muslims they resented discrimination by a Sunni majority regime. Elsewhere in Algeria, Egypt, Yemen, Morocco, Tunisia and Syria, players and managers remained aloof.

Saroot describes his role as "a big responsibility to lift people's morale. We always try to stay optimistic about the future. The more optimistic we are the more the revolution keeps going It's worth it. I'm free. I've travelled all over the world to play football. But freedom is not just about me or about traveling. What about everyone else? Freedom is a big word. It's about freedom of speech and freedom of opinion. If you see something wrong being done, freedom is being able to talk about it.[x]
Speaking in the same broadcast as JoumaaSaroot asserted that he knew personally that a majority of athletes slated to represent Syria in London were doing so to shield their family from the repercussions of defection. "They don't want to play for a flag that they have no pride or faith in, he said.

In a column last year in the London-based Arabic daily Al Quds al Arabi, writer Elias Khoury describes a documentary entitled Al Waar (Rocky Terrain) by an anonymous Syrian filmmaker that portrays Saroot as a leader of the protests and a composer of some of its slogans and songs.[xi] His features are Bedouin; he is a thirsty person who is not satisfied with only freedom Itis he who composes for the nocturnal gatherings for a popular festival in the suburbs of Homs where the air bears bullets. The slogans are an appeal by a decapitated nation and the will of a people determined not to bow to anyone, Khoury writes.
Go is the cry of the brave, A cry of the city with Bedouins, A cry of all religions, The cry of Syria and the land it covers: Let them leave him and his dogs and the destruction they have wrought, the film quotes the chants of the protesters crafted by SarootKhoury describes Saroot as the protagonist of the film whose voice challenges the Assad forces weaponry. Our weapon is our voice, Saroot says in the film.

Throughout the film a picture of Bashar al-Assad superimposed on that of his father, Hafez al-Assad, constitutes the background with the words, Assad or nothing, a play on the slogan that accompanied the portrait of Hafez during his rule: Our leader in eternity and beyond.

James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East SoccerParts of this story first appeared on his blog.






[i] Al-Bayada | Homs | Assad Forces Attack Home of Abdul Basit Saroot, Brother Now Martyr, You Tube, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyGmTMivRdA&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PL059D7AA813D3D375, 11.12.11.
[ii] Syria: Songs of Defiance, Al Jazeera English, March 15, 2012, http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/peopleandpower/2012/03/201231213549186607.html
[iii] Syria Soccer Star Says NATO Now! - Assad Slaughter Must Be Stopped! 12-15-11, You Tube, December 16, 2011, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlw4V1N-um4
[iv] James M. Dorsey, FIFA bans Syria from 2014 World Cup, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, http://mideastsoccer.blogspot.com/2011/08/fifa-bans-syria-from-2014-world-cup.html
[v] James M. Dorsey, Everything goes in Syrian crackdown and Syrian soccer, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, November 9, 2011
[vi] Mustapha Ajbaili, Syrian goalkeeper arrested for sheltering armed gangs, Al Arabiya, August 4, 2011, http://english.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/08/04/160768.html
[vii] Hisham ShirabiNeopatriarchy: A Theory of Distorted Change in Arab Society, London, 1992
[viii] Idem page 7
[ix] Niel Connery, Syrian Olympic chief to attend Games despite calls for a ban, ITV News, April 3, 2012, http://www.itv.com/news/2012-04-03/syrian-olympic-committee-president-to-attend-london-2012/
[x] Syria: Songs of Defiance, Al Jazeera English, March 15, 2012, http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/peopleandpower/2012/03/201231213549186607.html
[xi] James M. Dorsey, Syrian goalkeeper emerges as protest leader in embattled city of Homs, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, November 13, 2011,http://mideastsoccer.blogspot.com/2011/11/syrian-goalkeeper-emerges-as-protest.html

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