Tamir Sorek, "Threatened Masculinities and Women's Exclusion in Israeli Soccer"
(page 4 of 5)
Mizrahi masculinity under threat
Following the wave of immigration in the 1950s and 1960s, Israel
emerged as an ethnically stratified society, in which Palestinian
citizens were relegated to the bottom of the socio-economic hierarchy,
with the population of the middle and upper classes largely comprised of
Jews from European origin (Ashkenazim); Jews from Arab and Muslim
countries (Mizrahim) are an intermediate group between the Ashkenazim
and the Arab citizens.[19]
Although the boundaries between
Ashkenzim and Mizrahim are much more diffused and blurred than the
boundaries between Arabs and Jews, division within the Jewish population is a crucial
factor in Israeli political dynamics.
Like Palestinian citizens (although to a lesser extent), Mizrahi men
have suffered from a high rate of unemployment and occupy the least
prestigious and lowest-paid occupations. A combination of structural
discrimination and perceptions of cultural inferiority have pushed many
Mizrahim into dependency on the state institutions. These developments
were especially detrimental to Mizrahi fatherhood and were expressed in
yearning for an image of a powerful Mizrahi masculinity.[20] In
addition, the Israeli army, where hegemonic ideals of Zionist
masculinities were displayed, reproduced the ethnic stratification in
civil life, with the Mizrahim underrepresented in higher ranks (although
to a lesser extent in the last two decades) and in the more prestigious
units and positions, such as the infantry "special" units and combat
pilots.[21]
The 1970s, a decade of turbulent Mizrahi activism, was accompanied by
the success of soccer teams that were followed mainly by Mizrahi fans
and by the growing visibility of Mizrahi soccer stars. As members of the
working class of emerging Israeli society, Mizrahi men gradually became
the dominant group among Israeli soccer players. Many of them saw it as
an "education by-passing" channel for mobility, though a systematic
examination of this assertion has proven that it was mainly an
illusion.[22] The
two championships won by Ha-Po'el Be'er Sheva (a
team which represented Be'er Sheva, a southern city populated by a
Mizrahi majority) in 1974 and 1975 and Beitar Jerusalem's win of the
state cup in 1976 and 1979 were seen by many of their fans as a
successful Mizrahi protest and were compatible with the emergence of the
image of a strong Mizrahimi man. Soccer stars like Gideon Damti, Shalom
Avitan, and Eli Ohana provided a successful model of Mizrahi
masculinity.
Soccer stadiums in Jewish localities thus gradually became spaces
dominated by the Mizrahi working class. The particular class and ethnic
character of Israeli soccer is evident in municipal authorities' support
for the sport. In an analysis of support for these clubs in Israel in
1998, I found a positive and statistically significant correlation
(0.58) between financial support for soccer clubs and the relative share
of inhabitants whose continent of origin is Asia or Africa. Similarly,
there was a negative and statistically significant correlation (-0.65)
between the municipal support for soccer clubs and the relative share of
inhabitants whose continent of origin is Asia or Afirca. Namely, soccer
has had great importance in predominantly Mizrahi towns.[23]
Mizrahi men have found themselves, however, in a sensitive position.
Since Arabs were the ultimate enemies of Zionism, a powerful hegemonic
ideology, many of the Mizrahim have made extra efforts to efface any
traces of their Arab cultural identity and appearance. Obtaining
privileges and acceptance as legitimate Israelis has been conditioned on
their ability to make clear distinction between themselves and the
Arabs. Additionally, during the first decades of the state's existence,
Arab Palestinian and Mizrahi Jews competed for the same low-paid jobs, a
competition which was much less familiar to Ashkenazi middle class men.
These two factors have created a particularly tense relationship between
Mizrahi Jews and Palestinians, despite their relative cultural
proximity.
Learning that they share a major pastime in the soccer stadium with
Arab men was an unpleasant discovery for Mizrahi fans, especially given
the growing success and visibility of Arab soccer. Hence, the most
charged encounters of Arab and Jewish fans in the soccer stadium have
happened when Arab teams have met teams with a strong Mizrahi identity,
like Beitar Jerusalem, Bnei Yehuda, Sport Club Ashdod, and Ha-Poel Be'er
Sheva. Beitar, incidentally, is the only team in the Israeli first
division that has never included an Arab player on its roster, and a
non-Arab Muslim player from Nigeria who joined the team in 2004 left it
the middle of the season under pressure from fans.
After Beitar was defeated 4 to 1 by Sakhnin in Jerusalem on October
4, 2004, Beitar fans published a video clip on the web which included
the goals from the game and was preceded by the words: "Yesterday was
the most painful, humiliating and embarrassing day in the history of our
club since it was founded in 1936 . . . This day was inscribed in the
history books as a day of mourning". Being defeated by Arab men was
understood as an extreme form of humiliation. The tight link between the
need to reaffirm their Jewishness, to de-orientalize their image, and to
fortify their normative sense of masculinity is reflected by the
frequent combinations of ethno-religious insults and the questioning of
the heterosexuality of their opponents. "Muhammad is gay!" for example,
is a popular cry used by Beitar fans against Sakhnin.
The homophobic discourse is especially relevant to this discussion as
it is an important indicator of the level of threat to the fans'
masculinity. Homophobia can be interpreted as an expression of the fear
of men that other men would detect their insufficient masculinity.[24]
A
recent experiment in social psychology confirmed that men who receive
messages which threaten their masculinity express a greater level of
homophobia compared with other men.[25]
The frequent homophobic
remarks of sport fans should be understood in this context. As Raz Yosef
argues, the Mizrahi protest in Israel since the 1970s has been highly
influenced by the humiliation of the Mizrahi father, which has
frequently included the imagining of Mizrahi men as sexually subjugated
to Ashkenazi men.[26]
Therefore, while this protest strove to
undermine Ashkenazi hegemony, it attempted to reestablish the
patriarchal status of Mizrahi men and included elements that were
oppressive toward women and homosexuals.
While teasing the opponent team by ascribing homosexuality is very
common among soccer fans, in Israel this "accusation" is most frequently
directed toward the soccer team of Ha-Po'el Tel Aviv by other Jewish
teams. In the website forum of Beitar Jerusalem's fans, for example,
whenever Ha-Po'el Tel Aviv is mentioned, its name immediately evokes the
adjectives "Arab," "Ashkenazi," "non-Jew," and "gay."
Not only does Ha-Po'el Tel Aviv have a long tradition of including
Arab players but it was also the flagship of the old Mapai
Ashkenazi establishment, who ruled the country until 1977 and whose
policies significantly contributed to the inferior positioning of
Mizrahim within the socio-economic hierarchy. Therefore, the team has an
Ashkenazi and establishment-oriented image in the eyes of other teams'
fans.
The picture on the left reflects the connection between threatened
masculinities and the construction of ethnicity within the Israeli
soccer sphere. It appeared on the website of Ha-Po'el Be'er Sheva, a
team with a firm Mizrahi majority among its fans. It embodies an attempt
to humiliate Ha-Po'el Tel Aviv's fans by superimposing two flags on
their club's emblem: the flag of the Palestinian Authority and the flag
of the gay community (which considers Tel Aviv to be its "capital").
The combination of a questioning of the national loyalty of opponents
and a questioning of their masculinity (homosexuality as evidence of
impaired masculinity) is related to the anxiety of Mizrahi soccer fans
about their masculinity, as well as their public (mis)identification as
Arabs. As a matter of fact, Ha-Po'el Tel Aviv fans are ethnically and
politically heterogeneous, and obviously there is no evidence that their
sexual orientation is different from fans of other teams. However,
soccer cultures tend to easily construct a series of dichotomous
contrasts.
For example, after violent clashes between fans of Ha-Po'el Tel Aviv
and Bnei Yehuda, a team that represents a poor Mizrahi neighborhood in
Tel Aviv, a fan of Bnei Yehuda told the local newspaper: "Ha-Po'el fans
are unbearable. They have always been the elites, dandies, as if they
are Europeans. They have this patronizing shape. They would always tell
you in the face that their way is the right way, that white is the nice
color. They are left wing and we are right wing, they are rich and we
are poor, they are the successful and we are the loser, they are the
beautiful and we are the ugly." The dandyism of Ha-Poel Tel Aviv is
presented by the fan as one element in a whole set of
ethnic-class-political identity, which is implicitly opposed to the
rough masculinity of Mizrahi working class men. As if to emphasize the
ethnic basis of the animosity to the "dandies," when the same fan was
asked if he would
have thrown stones on Beitar Jerusalem's fans he said: "Are you out of
your mind? Beitar is our big sister - you don't hit family members."[27]
|