Tamir Sorek, "Threatened Masculinities and Women's Exclusion in Israeli Soccer"
(page 3 of 5)
Hence, the Israeli political establishment and the young men in the
Israeli-ruled Palestinian towns and villages shared interests in
developing Arab sports. Particularly since the early 1960s, Arab soccer
clubs in Israel were spreading. Israeli authorities considered these
clubs a useful antidote to nationalist consciousness and deliberately
encouraged and supported them, as long as they played under the official
umbrella of the Zionist sports organization.
Independent Arab sports organizations were banned and quickly
demolished if they appeared. Interestingly enough, the initial tendency
of the Israeli government was to encourage sports that required much
less physical contact, such as table tennis, basketball, and volleyball,
and to discourage contact sports, as in wrestling, boxing, and soccer.
However, since they could not compete with the popularity of soccer,
this policy was quickly abandoned and soccer games were disrupted only
if the Palestinians attempted to establish autonomous sports
institutions.
Under these circumstances, soccer became a safe ground for Arab men
to display a combative, quasi-nationalist masculinity, which did not
involve the risk of confrontation with state authorities. Paradoxically,
by muting their expression of nationalist aspirations, or by relegating
them to other spheres, Arab male soccer players were able to simulate a
war against Jewish men. For Arab soccer fans in the late 1960s,
identification with successful Arab soccer players, even if they played
for Jewish teams, could reinforce masculinity and national self-respect.
These identifications did not risk the potential sanctions involved in
identifying with other heroes, such as the Fatah movement, which was
beginning to gain momentum at exactly the same time.
Simultaneously, the relative importance of soccer for Ashkenazi
Jewish men diminished, as the Zionist ethos promoted the military to the
top of a hierarchy of masculinity. Under conditions of violent, tense,
and continuous national conflict, the hegemonic ideals of Zionist
masculinity were embodied in the combatant soldier, preferably an
officer in a special unit.[15]
Some scholars have emphasized the
similarity of sports institutions and the military as sites of masculine
competitiveness, and therefore one can assume that they might provide
similar opportunities for men to rehabilitate their masculinity.[16]
The growing popularity of soccer among Arab men is partly related
to their exemption from Israeli military service and their inability to
take the risk of fighting against the state.
The number of Arab soccer teams playing in the Israeli Football
Association steadily increased until the late 1990s when their
percentage peaked at 42 percent of the teams, more than double their
relative share of the population (16 percent). Interestingly, another
sport in which Arab men have not only been overrepresented but have even
dominated is boxing - another sport which was "not recommended" for Arabs
by the Israeli government in the early 1960s, and a sport which
stretches the fine balance between violence and the regulation of
violence in sports.
However, the explanation of soccer as a substitute for war is far
from satisfying given the relative scarcity of violent outbreaks in
Arab-Jewish encounters compared with other soccer competitions, and the
absolute exclusion of Palestinian national symbols from the soccer
stadium. While Jewish working-class soccer fans sometimes aspire to
intensify the national conflict in soccer stadiums, Arab soccer fans are
in a more ambiguous position. Soccer is indeed an opportunity to "beat
the Jewish men" in a physical competition. But it is also a unique
opportunity for Arab citizens to obtain integration and acceptance by
the Jewish majority. It is a sphere that glorifies a meritocratic ethos
and therefore offers players some protection from the discriminatory
practices they face in many other spheres of Israeli society. Therefore,
Arab fans manage their confrontation with Jewish fans with great
care.
One consequence of this caution is that sexual and sexist symbolism
gains prominence and overshadows nationalist connotations. For example,
in one of the games I attended in 1999, the reaction of fans from
Sakhnin (an Arab town) to anti-Arab curses by the fans of the Jewish
team, Beitar Jerusalem, was the slogan "Sarah on the dick" (in Hebrew),
referring to Sarah Netanyahu, the wife of the right-wing Prime Minister
at the time, Binyamin Netanyahu, who was admired by Beitar's fans. This
cry was a symbolic attempt to sexually subjugate the political identity
of Beitar fans, without attacking their ethno-national identity as Jews.
In this way, Sakhnin fans did not deviate from the standard repertoire
of non-Arab fans in Israel, and their political protest remained
sublimated. It represented a wider attempt of the Arab fans to abate
national tensions on the soccer field, or at least to leave these
tensions unarticulated and inexplicit.
The presence of Arab soccer players in the Israeli soccer sphere
provides some ironic anecdotes, such as when Arab soccer players are
invited to the Israeli national team, namely, to represent Israel at the
international level. Although some Jewish clubs have large circles of
Arab fans (especially those teams which have traditionally included Arab
players), victories of the Israeli national team are frequently
perceived as provocations against the national and masculine pride of
Arab men.[17]
However, when an Arab player is playing for Israel,
aspirations of integration gain prominence and the team is widely
supported by Arab men.[18]
Still, this support depends on the self-confidence of each man in his
masculine identity. In a survey I conducted in 2000, I found that Arab
men who described themselves as proud of their masculine identity had a
higher tendency to oppose the Israeli national team, compared with other
fans. The negative association between support for the national team and
pride in male identity suggests that fans concerned about their
masculinity do indeed consider the international encounter in sport an
opportunity for degrading the masculinity of the Jewish male. The threat
to masculine identity is tied to a great degree to the sense of
degradation on the national level, and the two dimensions, gender and
nation, mutually shape each other.
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