Chelsea Football Club spearheads the way for fighting discrimination and antisemitism on the soccer pitch.
The Chelsea Football Club training grounds were alive on Wednesday in preparation for the big game against Manchester United, but that was not the only thing haunting the minds of those in the facility.
The team were recently introduced to Holocaust survivor Harry Spiro, who chillingly recollected his experiences in Auschwitz, a concentration camp located in present-day Poland, within which the Nazis had murdered over a million innocent people, most of them due to their Jewish lineage.
“These players have a short attention span,” said Chelsea Football Club Chairman Bruce Buck to the Jerusalem Post. “I thought they would be on their iPhones the whole time.”
Buck was surprised, however, to find that the players “sat there and didn’t move a muscle.”
“They listened to every word and asked some very intelligent questions,” Buck stated. “Afterwards, a number of them indicated how eye-opening this was for them.”
Introducing the players of Chelsea to the history of antisemitism was just the first step the Chelsea Foundation, a foundation dedicated to using soccer as a platform to bring people together, took in their new initiative. Say No to anti-Semitism.
“I can’t say we enjoyed it because the things he was saying were very shocking,” Chelsea soccer player Cesc Fàbregas told the Jerusalem Post, speaking of his encounter with Spiro. “But I think everyone better understood why we are doing this campaign.”
Fàbregas additionally stated that he would be open to going to see Auschwitz in the future. “I was told that… if you are there, it is an experience that will make you upset, but… you should definitely go.”
The idea for such an initiative came from Roman Abramovich, the Russian-Israeli owner of Chelsea Football Club, who suggested that a more intense approach to antisemitism in particular is a necessary move for the club. His idea “was the impetus” for the team to take “a comprehensive approach to tackling antisemitism,” according to Buck.
The club’s educational approach to antisemitism in and out of the stadium is still in the works. Those who cry out discriminatory chants in the stadium today are removed, but once the project takes effect, the offenders will have the ability to shorten their ban by taking courses on discrimination provided by the soccer club to better understand their wrongs.
“Once you ban them, you are never going to change their view,” said Buck. “First of all, they have to recognize that they made a mistake. If they don’t do that, we are not going to engage in education because then it’ll be a waste of time.”
Buck explained that the ideal actions taken by the players of the team would be “for them to say, ‘racism and antisemitism is wrong and has got to be stopped.'”
Although this initiative may silence those with prejudices rather than ridding them of their discriminatory beliefs, it will stop the poisonous chain of fans following the actions of others. In other words, if those making crude cries from the crowd stop, newcomers will not have a source from which to develop their own discriminatory chants. Those who nevertheless continue the chants, are banned for life from the stadium.
Fàbregas found that education would be the best strategy to eradicate prejudice on the soccer field as a new father. “The parents that go [to games] with their sons” should not slur at people because “the children are listening and when they grow up, they sing what their parents sang.”
With the project having no deadline, the team plan on fighting antisemitism for however long it may take. “Our hope, of course, is to reduce antisemitism,” said Buck. “I think we can move the needle, and I think we already have. Our fan groups… have come out supporting what we’re doing.”
When asked if he believes that we will see the end to racism and antisemitism in soccer, Fàbregas immediately knocked on wood. “I pray and hope that we will see it one day in our lifetimes.”
“Unfortunately, I believe there will always be animals that behave badly.”
“People have been saying things that they have been thinking for many years, but never spoke out loud until now,” said Buck, who blaimed the change on populism.
The newest activity by the initiative was the campaign Pitch for Hope, which called for young adults in the United States, England and Israel, to propose unique projects that build bridges between all people. Chelsea and the World Jewish Congress, with which it is affiliated, gave the winners of each country $10,000 to turn their ideas into a reality.
The Israeli winning team was comprised of Eden Amos, Michael Shapira and Rave Saar Tirosh, whose innovation was to create clothing lines that support opposing soccer teams. The items are sold in opposing pairs so that those purchasing are encouraged to buy them with a team who they would traditionally be against. “When you buy the products, the prices change,” said Amos. “If you buy with a supporter of the other team, the price is cheaper, which encourages them to buy them together.”
“It doesn’t matter where you’re from,” said Fàbregas. “We are all different and we have to respect each other, and that is the real truth.”
@ david melech:
In many places cheering for the colors of a team is very tribal. So Tottenham, which is a rival of Chelsea and in “Jewish Area” of London identifies as the “Jews”, sort some (not all by far) Chelsea fans make antiSemitic chants in regards to Tottenham (this is an example). The society at large has many antiSemites so this easily fits into the overall societal context.
The same type of thing goes in Holland as Ajax fans call themselves the “Jews” and opposition make antiSemitic remarks or chants.
So this part of the overall societies. This goes on in many places in Europe.
yer hav 2 ask oneself why are the clubs fans anti Semitic? club has JEWISH owner who took the club outta road ta bankruptsee, had a JEWISH manager/coach who took the club to its 1st champs league final, has had JEWISH/ISRAELI players and no shortage of non white and muzzie players.
has a big ISRAELI following, not raised its season ticket prices in years.
has played and lost home and away to T A hapoel. its the fans of the other clubs that create the problem.
tomorrows game both teams are owned by JEWS. other EPL teams have JEWISH ownership,
take the leader of u k labour party to Auschwitz who is anti JEW anti ISRAEL and teach the brit (not bris) JEWS to vote against labour, start at the top.
ps kick man u in the **lls and its tata jose.