Morocco’s World Cup achievement also has greater implications - opinion
Simple human joy of victory: Arabs and Jews celebrate side-by-side with no one staging it for the world’s cameras.
There were impressive popular scenes of jubilation from the airport to the Royal Palace in Rabat that underlined the indescribable enthusiasm in Morocco, triggered by the unprecedented sporting results of the national team at the World Cup in Qatar.
There was a moving tribute by King Mohammed VI to the members of the Atlas Lions. Morocco’s team became the first African-Arab team to advance to the semi-finals of the World Cup.
The result obtained by the Moroccan team is not the result of chance. The king of Morocco himself supervised the construction of the Football Academy that bears his name. He financed it directly. This academy provided four players to the national team that competed in Qatar. A reorganization of clubs allows them to dominate African competitions. Qatar 2022 is experienced as the realization of Mohamed VI’s vision for sport in general and football in particular.
While it is possible to make too much of statistics on soccer, this victory has cultural and political implications for the world, which outsiders might not immediately see. Part of it is the simple, human joy of victory. If you remember the relation and excitement of America’s victory over Iran at an earlier stage of the World Cup, multiply that by 10.
The implications of Morocco's victory
The Moroccan team has many players who were born and raised in the Netherlands, France, Belgium and other European nations. They are the children of immigrants. Their parents obeyed the law, worked hard and made a life in their new lands. Their children grew up learning the values of hard work, tolerance and working alongside teammates with different faiths and languages, natives and newcomers, in school leagues.
As adults, these athletes acknowledged their family ties to their ancestral homeland, which allowed Moroccans to accept them as their own, but they didn’t feel any need to make statements against the lands where they once legally resided.
This kind of layered identity, leavened with tolerance, is now increasingly common in workplaces and practice fields in our globalized world. We accept that key players can hail from anywhere and unite across cultural divides. It is one thing to have a recognition of this fact by a high-flying consultant from Boston, it is quite another for it to be accepted as an unspoken background assumption by an auto worker in Tangier or a herder at the edge of the Sahara. Yet, it has happened. This is an important, unrecognized victory for liberalism and tolerance.
YET, ANOTHER cultural sign appears in how families are treated and portrayed. Morocco’s players also traveled to the World Cup with their parents, a fact repeatedly endlessly in Moroccan media. On social media, the teammates’ parents often appear in the background and sometimes in the foreground.
Respecting parents was once a universal value, even if not always honored among young adults, but now the idea has emerged that one can only fully develop oneself only by ejecting or rejecting all people from one’s past. This is wrong-headed. This World Cup victory shows that even star performers can strike a balance between individual achievement and family connection. Recent college grads might take note.
The World Cup also reveals that a rules-based international order that draws on many countries and cultures can succeed, even when regional favorites lose. Portugal’s excellent team must have been stunned. Reportedly, Portugal’s legendary player Cristiano Ronaldo wept. Yet, no one challenged the rules or the outcome.
The test of any rules-based system is what happens when upstarts win. Here we see that the system worked and that suggests that other global systems based on transparent rules can work, too.
Morocco in World Cup helped with regional peace
The game has also done its bit for world peace. One out of every 20 Israelis has parents or grandparents who once lived in Morocco. After Morocco’s globally televised victory, they flooded the streets in jubilation, joined by many Israelis with no ties to Morocco. This suggests that many people have more fellow feelings for their neighbors than extremists might imagine.
Arabs and Jews were celebrating side-by-side with no one staging it for the world’s cameras. This should give us hope that the Abraham Accords, which enabled four Arab nations, including Morocco, to diplomatically recognize Israel, can succeed.
Albert Camus, a winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, said that the theater and the soccer field were his two real universities that taught him about human nature. How people play games reveals something about their values and assumptions. In this case, some very good things.
The writer is a Moroccan publisher. He is on the board of directors of the Atlantic Council, the International Crisis Group, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Foreign Policy Research Institute and the Center for the National Interest.
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