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Conflict or world peace? How football is a game of two halves

Is the beautiful game a force for harmony?

February 11, 2010 10:13
Kefiyehs and Hebrew banners: supporters of the Arab Israeli team B’nei Sakhnin cross the political divide

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

6 min read

Six years ago, a small club from Galilee won the Israeli State Cup. It was the equivalent of Wimbledon beating Liverpool in the FA Cup Final at Wembley — except more so, because B’nei Sakhnin were the first Arab club ever to achieve this kind of success in Israeli football, and in winning the cup, surviving in the country’s Premier division and representing Israel in the Uefa Cup in Europe, Sakhnin became a focal point and a source of pride for all Arab Israelis.

Sakhnin’s epic season has now become the subject of a book, Goals for Galilee, by two former CNN reporters, Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler. They feel that Sakhnin’s experience was a significant moment not only in Israeli sport but in the country’s history and politics — proof that football can be a unifying force in society.

Klochendler asserts that the success of Sakhnin, a team which, in an echo of the Arab-Israeli narrative, had lost the use of their own stadium (it was not considered for top-level football), somehow affected the relationship of Jews and Arabs in Israel.

“For the first time, Israelis realised that maybe a majority of the Arabs living in Israel want to be a part of Israeli society. Until the Sakhnin phenomenon, the feeling among the majority of Jews was that they couldn’t trust the Arabs, that they want to throw the Jews into the sea. This was the first time that the Arabs showed they wanted to be a part of the country in such a tangible way that it was very hard to Jewish Israelis to deny that fact.”

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