Skip to content
  • Image
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Podcasts
  • Email
  • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
  • Contact
The Arab Daily News

The Arab Daily News

Original news, features, opinions from Chicago to Jerusalem

  • About
    • About
    • Our Writers
    • Book Store
    • Contact
    • Submit Book Reviews, Press Releases
    • Privacy Corrections Policy
    • Profile on Ray Hanania
    • Submit Press Release
  • Features
    • Food
    • Book Review
    • Humor
    • Movies
    • Travel
  • Arab US Community
    • Arab Stores Targeted
    • Arab Community Network Page
    • Arab Heritage America resources
    • Directory
      • Groups & Organizations
      • Mosques, Churches
      • Restaurants
      • 2008 & 2014 Arab Media Directories
    • National Arab Heritage Month
    • Video: Chicago Arab History
    • Video: Photo Array of Chicago Arabs
    • Overview of Arabs in America
    • Hanania standup comedy
    • Arabs on the Titanic
    • Obituaries
  • Podcasts
    • Ray Hanania on Politics Podcast
    • Arab News Ray Hanania Radio
    • Arab Radio Podcast intro
    • Radio Baladi Detroit
    • TwoGuys on Politics
  • Ray on Tiktok
  • Subscribe Ray’s Columns
  • Archive 2004-2013
  • Toggle search form
  • 10-01-25 Arab Center Web Ad 300x300
    Analysis by Arab Center Washington DC: Iran’s Nuclear Leverage Survives the War Arab Center Washington DC
  • Sir Rateb Rabie Newsletter image
    Peace activist and ecumenical Christian leader condemns Israel’s human rights violations American Arabs
  • Turkish festival Ad
    Visit Türkiye Without Leaving Chicago: The Turkish Festival Returns to Tinley Park This August Culture
  • Aber Kawas, Democratic Candidate for Senate District 12 in New York in the November 2026 General Election
    Aber Kawas Wins SD-12 Primary, on Track to Become First Palestinian, First Muslim Woman Elected in New York State American Arabs
  • State Rep. Justin Slaughter, Orland Mayor Jim Dodge, and American Arab Chamber President Hassan Nijem
    American Arab Chamber rallies community for Orland Mayor Jim Dodge American Arabs
  • 06-16-26 American Arab Chamber flyer for Dodge fundraiser
    American Arab Chamber of Commerce of Illinois host fundraiser for Orland Park Mayor Jim Dodge American Arabs
  • Maha bint Mishari bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
    The Board of Trustees Appoints HRH Dr. Maha bint Mishari bin Abdulaziz as the CEO of FII Institute Middle East
  • Team Qatar Enjoy Successful Opening Day at the 24 Hours of Le Mans  Middle East
  • Arab Center of Washington D.C. Executive Director Khalil Jahshan
    Arab Center analyzes prospects for an effective Arab Joint List in Israeli elections Activism
  • NoAzureforApartheid.com
    NO AZURE FOR APARTHEID: Workers Protest Microsoft’s Build Conference for Third Year in a Row Activism
  • Palestine Bleeds for You, by Ramsey Hanhan
    New Palestine Book by Ramsey Hanhan “Palestine Bleeds for You”, out June 9 Arab World
  • Mohammed Jaber, Trustee John Lawler, Mayor Jim Dodge, Chamber President Hassan Nijem Memorial Day Orland
    Arab Americans participate in Orland Park Memorial Day Commemoration May 25, 2026 American Arabs
  • Inside the new permanent Prayer Center for Drivers at O'Hare Airport Staging Area in Des Plaines
    Arab community thanks Aviation Officials for permanent O’Hare prayer center for hired drivers Activism
  • The Global Products Expo will host its annual Middle East food specialty expo in New Jersey from June 22 through June 24, showcasing more than 360 sponsor booths and Arabian displays
    New expo in New Jersey to focus on Arab and Middle Eastern foods American Arabs
  • American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee ADC Logo
    American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) welcomes two new board members American Arabs

UEFA Euro 2016: Fraternity, Unity and Diversity

Posted on June 14, 2016June 14, 2016 By Abdennour Toumi No Comments on UEFA Euro 2016: Fraternity, Unity and Diversity
SHARE ...
          
 
  

  • Tweet





Click here to subscribe FREE to Ray Hanania's Columns

UEFA Euro 2016: Fraternity, Unity and Diversity. France’s squad footballers cultural and ethnic origin, particularly for second and third generation football stars immigrants are victims of institutionalized racism.

By Abdennour Toumi

Abdennour Toumi
Abdennour Toumi

The UEFA Euro 2016 championship edition is one of world soccer’s most watched events. France is the hosting country and the most favored to win the tournament. In fact, France’s post-November Paris attacks have rubbed off on the Euro 2016 mood, notably on the squad’s colorful face. Gauging Karim Benzema, putting Hatem Ben Arfa on the waiting list, French citizens born to Algerian and Tunisian immigrants have aroused France’s media.

Weeks ago, an observation made by Eric Cantona, the MU mid-90’s number 7 legend, in a British newspaper, affirmed that there is, in fact, “a racist element in France’s squad coach Didier Deschamps and his family…” Later, Djamel Dabouz, a Franco-Moroccan comedian, regretted not seeing Benzema and Ben Arfa on the coach’s main list. Though Adil Rami, Seville FC skipper and Europa Cup 2016 champ, was called to fill the post of Varane after the forfeit of the latter.

The events leading up to these remarks and those that followed have put the Muslim and Arab community in France in the position of protagonist in an intense political drama. The matter of the Benzema affair reached the French Football Federation (FFF) president’s office, judging Benzema would not play for Les Bleus in the Euro Cup.

In an interview with the Spanish sports journal Marca, Benzema was asked about a remark made a few days earlier by French soccer and MU artist Eric Cantona, who mentioned that Benzema’s and Ben Arfa’s incontestable status had suggested that Didier Deschamps was racist. Benzema declared, “No, I don’t think so,” he continued, “but he (Deschamps) caved to pressure from a racist part of France.”

Benzem’s words transformed what had been a political dramaturge story about Arab and African soccer stars, coming en masse from the banlieue (suburbs), into a shrill debate over the role of racism in French society, politics and sports.

Over the past two decades these young banlieusards have served as a unit of measure for the ups and downs of France’s multi-cultural model and a land of immigrants.

Soccer-Paris fan zone under 24-7 surveillance during Euro 2016
Soccer-Paris fan zone under 24-7 surveillance during Euro 2016. Photo courtesy of Abdennour Toumi

When France hosted the 1998 World Cup, a multicolored squad composed of players of French, African, and Arab descent defeated Brazil in the finale in Stade de France, Seine-St. Denis, the hot neuf-trois (93) suburb, to win the championship and unify the country.

It was a victory that allowed the French to believe “unity in fraternity” was more than a political selling point slogan; that France’s varied communities strengthened rather than weakened the Republic. At that moment the French banner was not Bleu, Blanc, Rouge, but Blanc, Black, and Beur. The face of Zinedine Zidane was brandished as a symbol on the Arc de Triomphe.

However, in moments following the Paris attacks of November, 2015 a renewed sense of racism arose, which affected legal sports in the so-called Benzema affair, in part due to the exponential rise of Muslim and Arab anti-sentiment in France to the ethnic turbulence suggesting that the country’s stigmatized suburban youths, mostly originally from North African immigrants, wanted Benzema and Ben Arfa.

They are the cultural and ethnic face of the youth on the French national squad.

The youth of the suburbs are still looking for another Zidane, who now coaches Benzema’s Real Madrid team, who won the Champions League in May. He has supported his protégé speaking carefully on the Benzema exclusion, saying only that “one can be disappointed as a soccer fan by Benzema’s absence.”

Thus, the French media have been provoking Benzema, Nasri and Mahrez to show their pride for their parents’ native country. Mahrez chose Algeria and not France because of the injustice that Benzema and Nasri have suffered with the French coach and fans. Mahrez has become a football world class player, who won the championship with the Wolves of Leicester City. He was elected the MVP in the Premier League for the 2016 season two years ago, but was put on quarantine by the major French teams such as Marseille.

Soccer players, i France
Soccer players, in France

A national pride obliges these suburbs-born football stars to declare that Algeria is “l’algérie mon amour,” where one has citizenship or a country to which one has affectionate attachment.

Adding to these real societal imperatives the North African football stars now are pledging allegiance to their parents’ native countries, e.g. Bouhali opting for Morocco, Ghezal for Algeria, though they played and wore France’s U21 tri-color jersey before they made that choice. This episode goes back to the first generation of immigrant stars in the mid 70’s and 80’s, Dahleb, Mansouri and Medjadi. 

There is also the question of the French Regional Election of 2015 and its effect, when the Front National became France’s major political force. As a result, the French political establishment and media elite are panicking.

The situation has led the Socialist government to act like Marine and Marion alike, putting a huge pressure on the FFF president to decide quickly to throw Benzema under France’s squad bus. Nonetheless, the case against Benzema for having blackmailed his teammate Valbuena was dismissed.

Undoubtedly, there is disagreement over the Benzema affair; 82% of French white agree that his comportment in the sex-tape case justified his punishment. Few of Bemzema’s defenders portray him as an innocent victim of institutionalized racism; just as few credit him with a dose of narcissism in his concern over immoral issues, e.g. Zahia and Valbuena scandals. 

The football star had never previously bothered to address the issue of racism in French society until that time.

Yet, while Benzema’s character presents a melodramatic scene in French sports and politics, it is simply not enough to conclude, like the Le Pens, father, daughter and grand-daughter, who believe that Benzema is hiding his own depravity behind these outrageous charges against the French people. The “French people” include some 5 million French Muslims, the vast majority of whom are of North African or Middle Eastern descent, living in a country that is grappling very publicly with how Islam fits into the society.

Two months ago, a Le Figaro poll revealed that unease over the presence of Islam in France, once limited to the right and extreme right, has spilled over to the other side of the political spectrum. In 2010, 39 percent of Socialist voters agreed that Islam played too important a role in France; today, 52 percent believe this is the case. 

Nearly three decades ago, one of every three French citizens favored the building of more mosques’ today, scarcely one in 10 supports this policy.  And so on.

Indeed the dialectic between sports and politics in France started with the singing or not singing of the anthem by players, which led to a major debate in the country’s political establishment pertaining to their degree of patriotism and commitment to playing for their country.

Nowhere was this more pronounced than in France where players’ singing of the Marseillaise was judged in terms of its quality, demeanor, projection, and acquaintance with the text as proper measures of their extant national allegiance to France and thus their commitment to play for the national team.

Clearly, the volume of criticism escalates proportionally from the field-line up to the political parties’ headquarters.

Today, France is divided more than ever, a French malaise that has reached the footballers’ locker room. The question whether to have a rebellious or gentle rebeu (Arab) in the national squad is not going to change the trajectory of racism.

Even if les Bleus win the Euro with Griezmann, Pogba and Rami for France — the country has yet to answer the question, is France really still a land of fraternity and a symbol of national unity and diversity.





Click here to subscribe FREE to Ray Hanania's Columns

  • About
  • Latest Posts
Abdennour Toumi
Follow me:
Abdennour Toumi
Abdennour Toumi:
- France correspondent for The Arab Daily News.
- www.bareed-areej.com Editor-in-Chief
رئيس تحرير مجلة بريد الأريج
- Political consultant at IMPR a Think-Tank based in Ankara, Turkey.
- Member at the European Observatory for Arabic Language Teaching based in Paris, France.
- Affiliated with Sociology of Islam Journal and contributor at Middle East Studies / International Studies, Sociology of Islam and Muslim Societies Center, Portland State University in Portland, OR.

EDUCATION: Diplôme des Études Approfondies (DEA) in Political Science from Toulouse University I, France. Master’s degree in Law from Algiers University, Algeria.

Email im at: [email protected]
Abdennour Toumi
Follow me:
Latest posts by Abdennour Toumi (see all)
  • The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Is the Neither-Peace-nor-Security As-sumption Dominating Again? - June 7, 2021
  • Algeria: “I Can See Clearly Now” - August 5, 2019
  • Majesty Mohammed VI and General Gaïd Salah Tear Down This Wall! - July 29, 2019
NVP: 228

  • Tweet

SHARE ...
          
 
  
 
          
 
 Tweet 
Abdennour Toumi, Arab World, Bloggers, Commentary, Editors Picks, Europe, North Africa, Sports Tags:Algeria, Europe, football, France, Islam, Morocco, Muslims, North Africa, politics, Soccer

Post navigation

Previous Post: Muslim organizations denounce Orlando massacre
Next Post: Saudi Arabia, Egypt lead with best Universities

Related Posts

  • Federal Nuclear Lawsuit and Israel’s Gagging American Arabs
  • Saudi Arabia and Iran: Volatile Political Geography of Oil and Minorities Arab World
  • USS Liberty Veterans Association VP Goes to D.C. to Establish USS Liberty Remembrance Day Over Troubled Waters Arab World
  • Hamas Israel Ceasefire International Court and Palestinian Resistance Unity Arab World
  • BDS for Freedom, Justice, Equality
    Response to Mitch McConnell and Kevin McCarthy’s Idiot Wind Arab World
  • Belgian official reviews Gaza humanitarian crisis Arab World

More Related Articles

Small Town Masjid Sets the Bar Activism
Indianapolis event raises $100,000 for UNRWA, supported by ADC, MESA at IUPUI. Photo courtesy of ADC More than $100,000 raised to support UNRWA at Indianapolis event American Arabs
Wheaton College to fire Black teacher over Islam American Arabs
Politicians VS We Americans and the USS LIBERTY Bloggers
Trade unions test Qatari sincerity with demands for labour reform Arab World
John McCain was never a God, just a complicated flawed human Bloggers

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Arab Center Ad
Arab Center Ad
  • OPINION COLUMNS
  • 02-12-26 Ray Hanania on Marc SIms Podcast
    Ray Hanania joins Marc Sims podcast on censorship, Bad Bunny and racism
    February 12, 2026
  • Arab Center Washington DC
    Arab Center Analysis: Israel’s declining support among American Evangelicals 
    January 1, 2026
  • Akram Baker
    Akram Baker remembered, worked at Orient House in Jerusalem with the late Faisal Husseini
    December 12, 2025
  • 10-01-25 Arab Center Web Ad 300x300
    The CMCC and the US-Israel Alliance: Collusion or Enforcement Mechanism?
    December 5, 2025
  • Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
    Construction in the E1 Area: Preventing Palestinian Geographical Contiguity
    October 27, 2025

Couyrageous Thought: Hanania Syndicated Columns

Ray Hanania courageous Thought website logo
Ray Hanania

Enter Your Email to Subscribe to Ray Hanania’s Columns

Creative Commons License
All work on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Do not edit original work. Give credit to the original source. Some photos published with permission from Zemanta and Wikipedia.

The Lightning Strike Radio Sun 8-10 AM

Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show
Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show
Pappas Ad
  • NEWS
  • 10-01-25 Arab Center Web Ad 300x300
    Analysis by Arab Center Washington DC: Iran’s Nuclear Leverage Survives the War
    July 8, 2026
  • Sir Rateb Rabie Newsletter image
    Peace activist and ecumenical Christian leader condemns Israel’s human rights violations
    July 4, 2026
  • Turkish festival Ad
    Visit Türkiye Without Leaving Chicago: The Turkish Festival Returns to Tinley Park This August
    July 3, 2026
  • Aber Kawas, Democratic Candidate for Senate District 12 in New York in the November 2026 General Election
    Aber Kawas Wins SD-12 Primary, on Track to Become First Palestinian, First Muslim Woman Elected in New York State
    June 25, 2026
  • State Rep. Justin Slaughter, Orland Mayor Jim Dodge, and American Arab Chamber President Hassan Nijem
    American Arab Chamber rallies community for Orland Mayor Jim Dodge
    June 17, 2026
  • New-iTunes-1400-x-1400-The-Ray-Hanania-Show-Podcast-Icon-300-x-300.jpg
  • Podcast-iTunes-Logo-Chi-City-Hall-1985.jpg
  • terroristbookcover-300-x-300.jpg
  • The-Kings-Pawn-Book-300-x-300.png
  • powerpr300x300ad.jpg
  • NEWSWIRE
  • 10-01-25 Arab Center Web Ad 300x300
    Analysis by Arab Center Washington DC: Iran’s Nuclear Leverage Survives the War
    July 8, 2026
  • Sir Rateb Rabie Newsletter image
    Peace activist and ecumenical Christian leader condemns Israel’s human rights violations
    July 4, 2026
  • Turkish festival Ad
    Visit Türkiye Without Leaving Chicago: The Turkish Festival Returns to Tinley Park This August
    July 3, 2026
  • Aber Kawas, Democratic Candidate for Senate District 12 in New York in the November 2026 General Election
    Aber Kawas Wins SD-12 Primary, on Track to Become First Palestinian, First Muslim Woman Elected in New York State
    June 25, 2026

Follow Ray Hanania at
Twitter
Facebook
TitkTok
BlueSky
RayHanania Columns
UpScroll
Threads

Click here to get information on The Ray Hanania Radio Show and its podcasts

Copyright © 2026 The Arab Daily News.

Powered by PressBook Premium theme