Theguardian
Wednesday briefing: How fan violence became a political football
J.Nelson5 hr ago
Good morning. Last week, when violence erupted around a Europa League fixture in Amsterdam between Ajax and Israel's Maccabi Tel Aviv , a fairly ordinary football match became the locus for something much larger, and much darker. The story was initially characterised as an unprovoked and antisemitic attack on Israeli fans just trying to enjoy a football match in Europe; even Joe Biden called it "despicable" and said it "echoed dark moments in history when Jews are persecuted". And there is no doubt that an appalling strand of antisemitism ran through much of the violence that unfolded in Amsterdam, from fans ordered to show their passports to check if they were Israeli to beatings being handed out while the assailants shouted: "Jewish, Jewish, IDF, IDF." But the chronology of the story that emerged, usefully set out here , suggests another strand to the clashes: violence and anti-Palestinian racism from Maccabi fans in the buildup to the game, and images of marauding hooligans that reflect a much wider phenomenon attached to football in Europe and Israel alike. From the beginning, this story has been deeply politicised. But to make sense of what happened, it helps to understand something about contemporary football hooliganism, and how it intersects with wider societal currents. For today's newsletter, I spoke to James Montague, author of 1312: Among the Ultras – A Journey with the World's Most Extreme Fans , about what happened in Amsterdam – and whether it should even be classified as football violence. Here are the headlines. Five big stories
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Read the full article:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/13/wednesday-briefing-how-fan-violence-became-a-political-football
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