When I first moved to America, I ended up playing
junior soccer with a team made up almost exclusively of Turks that was called
New York Besiktas. We wore the black and white stripes of the Istanbul club, we
had the crest containing the crescent of Islam over our hearts. During that
hugely entertaining season, I learned that the Turks had a near-monopoly on the
petrol stations of Long Island, loved to argue with each other at half-time,
and, if you were wearing the colours of Besiktas, you had to despise their hated
crosstown rivals Galatasaray and Fenerbache.
That much came to mind over the past few weeks as I
watched the television news scenes of civil unrest from Turkey. Perhaps the
most alarming aspect of the whole brouhaha about Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s
apparent desire to make the country less secular and more religiously
conservative is the galvanizing effect it has had on the soccer clubs. Witness social
media spreading a remarkable photograph of three Istanbul fans wearing
Besiktas, Galatasaray and Fenerbache shirts while marching together, their arms
entwined beneath a flag that read: "Tayyip do you know Istanbul United?
Since 31 May 2013."
Imagine the most rabid Celtic and Rangers fans coming
together, co-ordinating a march to demand Scottish independence and you start
to picture how seismic and impactful this stuff has been on Turkey. Ordinarily,
these supporters despise each other and very often, way too often in fact,
clashes between their clubs, result in violence, hooliganism and murder. They
are united now though because they see that something more important than
sporting bragging rights over local rivals is at stake. This is not about goals
scored or titles won, it’s about the future direction of the country they love.
Of course, we’ve been here before in recent years.
During the Egyptian uprising in 2011, soccer fans were credited with being the
most organised and coherent protesters when the people started taking to the
streets to try to oust President Mubarak. In particular, the fans of Al Ahly
(which translates as The National), a club formed a century earlier to help
give students a voice against the British colonial rulers, were prominent on
the barricades and in the pulling together of the various strands of the
movement.
“The involvement of organized soccer fans in Egypt’s
anti-government protests constitutes every Arab government’s worst nightmare,”
wrote James Dorsey, an expert on the Middle East. “Soccer, alongside Islam,
offers a rare platform in the Middle East, a region populated by authoritarian
regimes that control all public spaces, for the venting of pent-up anger and
frustration.”
While the role of soccer in the revolution in Egypt
was overshadowed by a riot at a match in Port Said where 73 died, the
importance of sport as a vehicle for protest hasn’t been diminished any on the
world stage. In the build-up to last week’s elections in Iran, soccer clubs
featured again and again in dispatches. Some candidates promised to free teams
from government control, others sponsored the teams in an effort to win votes.
All the while, the rulers worried that Iran clinching World Cup qualification
might yield celebrations that would become become an occasion for protest
against the government.
All of this is relevant because perhaps the most
shameful aspect of recent Irish history has been the public’s rather stoic acceptance
of the bondholder bail out and other fiscal atrocities committed by those with
their hands on the reins of power. I understand there is no great protest
culture in Ireland but, from the outside looking in, it seems astonishing that
more people were not moved to take to the streets in greater numbers to vent
their rage and demand action.
To this end, I look at the stuff going on in Turkey
and Egypt and I realise we have the very vehicle for an Irish protest movement right
under our noses. We have the sporting organisation that unites more people than
any other. We have the GAA. By most estimates one in four people are members of
a GAA club. There is one, usually with a clubhouse and meeting rooms, in every
parish in the 26 counties. The GAA has the power and the infrastructure already
in place to demand and to effect real change. It has the power to move
mountains.
That it has never flexed this muscle yet isn’t the
point. It could and maybe, as generations of Irish children have been sold down
the river for the bondholders, it should. There’s a great irony here too. From
what I can see, the longest and most sustained protest against the bondholders
has come from Ballyhea, a town many of us instantly associate with hurling.
Moreover, one of the key figures in that weekly and very noble tilt at the
windmill is the Irish Examiner sports journalist Diarmuid O’Flynn.
In the interests of full disclosure, I don’t know
Diarmuid O’Flynn. I spoke to him on the phone once many, many years ago. But
here’s what I do know. Him and his ilk have done the country some service with
their weekly effort and they have also offered an example. All those people
sitting around in pubs, whingeing about the austerity measures and the
increased levies and the Anglo tapes, need to get off their arses too to help
the country get out from under these punitive conditions. And the GAA could
have a role to play in this.
The GAA can provide a nationwide apparatus and a
formal structure to any protest movement. It also has the social and moral
weight to force the government to act. To do so all it needs is to stand up,
speak up and show the authorities just how many people come under the GAA
banner. Picture Kilkenny, Cork, Dublin and Donegal players heading up a million
man march through the streets of Dublin the day before an All-Ireland final.
Some might think that sounds ludicrous. Not more ludicrous than the idea of
Istanbul’s three major clubs uniting under one flag to protest a prime minister.
Nice idea Dave, and might be popular at a club level and even a few county boards, but once you go further up the greasy pole I can't imagine that Croke Park would dare endanger the possibility of future Department of Sport largesse.
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