Become a Member
Karen E H Skinazi

ByKaren E H Skinazi , Karen E H Skinazi

Opinion

100 days since October 7: I just wish this ‘match’ would end

In Birmingham and Miami, Karen E H Skinazi’s experience is very different – or is it?

January 14, 2024 09:59
Copy of GettyImages-1904765226
Pro-Palestinian supporters wave Palestinian flags and chant slogans during a demonstration in central London on January 6, 2024, calling for a ceasefire now in the war in Gaza. Thousands of civilians, both Palestinians and Israelis, have died since October 7, 2023, after Palestinian Hamas militants based in the Gaza Strip entered southern Israel in an unprecedented attack triggering a war declared by Israel on Hamas with retaliatory bombings on Gaza. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP) (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

A friend’s son, who is in primary school, was approached by a classmate keeping a tally. “Which team are you supporting?” the boy asked. My friend’s son was confused, but the boy persisted: “You know, Israel and Palestine. Which team?”

Football culture reigns supreme in Britain, and when we moved to Birmingham almost a decade ago, my husband wanted to get the kids into it. Back home in Canada, we had gone to ice hockey games and baseball games; in our new home, obviously, it would be football. My boys arrived in Birmingham already owning Man United jerseys, as it happens, so when Man United came to play our local team—Aston Villa—I suggested they wear them to Villa Park. I thought it would be cute to show up in matching outfits, and all the better that the jerseys represented of one of the teams playing. How could I know that appearing to support the away team was deemed utterly unacceptable? Or that away fans had separate rules and a small, designated space of their own and “Any visiting supporters identified in home areas of Villa Park will be ejected from the stadium”?

Topics:

Israel