The ADL's Andrew Srulevitch says what has worked in the US could work here
January 29, 2019 09:23For those obsessed with the ins and outs of European football, it has been a tough few months. Not necessarily because of anything the players have done on the pitch, but because of a series of ugly headlines and stories about racism from fans.
And not just one or two isolated instances, but repeated reports of fans chanting antisemitic slurs from the stands, of peanuts thrown at black players, of fans and players giving Nazi salutes.
In December alone, Football Against Racism in Europe reported 23 racist, antisemitic or homophobic incidents at games. Bananas and bags of peanuts were thrown at black players.
Muslim players were called “parasites.” Fans of the Italian team, SS Lazio, gave Nazi salutes and shouted racist and antisemitic chants.
In the United States, we have had our own share of controversies involving sports teams, fans, bigotry and free speech, including the recent “take a knee” controversy.
But nothing compares to what we’ve seen in the past few years in European sport. From our vantage point as an anti-hate organisation doing work to prevent this from happening in the United States, it’s really a lamentable state of affairs.
But it doesn’t have to continue on in this way.
Here are five things European teams can do to address this problem now. We offer these not to be overly prescriptive, but because we have had experience and success with similar initiatives here in the U.S.
In Europe, antisemitism should be just as taboo as other forms of racism. Just as players should play hard and fair, fans should root hard and respectfully. By doing so, they will remove the stain of bigotry from the “beautiful game”.
Andrew Srulevitch is ADL’s Director of European Affairs