Fans of Beitar Jerusalem soccer team fed up with racism, form new club

The soccer fans took matters into their own hands, not willing to give up on their beloved sport nor on their anti-racist values.

Fans of Jerusalem soccer club fed up with racism form new club (Reuters)
JERUSALEM - A group of Jerusalem soccer supporters who were fed up with the behavior of their fellow fans have turned their backs on the club they followed and set up a friendlier, more tolerant outfit.
Around 4,000 fans who were previously loyal to Beitar Jerusalem, one of Israel's biggest and best supported clubs, have broken away to follow Beitar Nordia, which was formed by a small group of them four years ago.
Beitar Jerusalem is a bastion of Israel's political right-wing, and a group of their supporters known as "La Familia" has long been openly hostile and violent towards fellow fans. Israel's Arab minority has been the main object of their hatred.
While Beitar's players have worked to deliver success on the pitch, the club's "La Familia" supporters have often made those efforts difficult through their misconduct.
The club has faced disciplinary action, including fines and point deductions, and even had to play matches behind closed doors for offences including fan violence, the use of flares, pitch invasions and racist chanting.
Unlike almost all other Israeli soccer clubs, Beitar has never employed an Arab player.
Nordia, which has adopted the same yellow and black strip and the same team emblem, has a completely opposite attitude and has fielded four Arab players since its inception, and even has Arab fans.
Team captain Tzion Zaken, a former Beitar player, said the Nordia setup was unique because of its drive against racism and violence.
"Beitar Nordia is the only Israeli club I know that has formed to fight racism. Elsewhere, fans have rebelled because they didn't like the way their team was run but Nordia is unique," he told Reuters.
THIRD DIVISION MINNOWS
In an effort to curb the violence of some fans, Beitar owner Eli Tabib has ordered the east stand at Jerusalem's Teddy Kollek Stadium, where the most fanatical supporters sit, to be closed for some matches.
Aviv Sharfstein, a member of Nordia's management, said the new club hopes one day to persuade the violent Beitar fans to abandon their militancy so that the two clubs could perhaps merge.
This appears unlikely in the short term, however, as Beitar has a far larger fan base and is a Premier League high flyer, while Nordia is a relative upstart and a third division midtable minnow.
Sharfstein said Nordia's supporters felt alienated because of the Beitar fans and the only course open to them was to form a separate club.
"We could no longer agree to hear the club narrative when fans used violence and displayed their racism by shouting 'death to Arabs'," he said.
"We felt we were going to matches alongside criminal organizations, they even used violence against us, the ordinary fans."
Taer Zaro, a resident of the Palestinian neighbourhood of Beit Hanina in east Jerusalem, who is studying physical education at Israel's Wingate Sports Institute, said he was happy to support Nordia and had found conviviality among his fellow fans.
"I was a supporter of Beitar Jerusalem when I was a boy and I only cared about the play on the pitch, I was not interested with what the racist fans were saying but I moved to support Nordia because I didn't want any part of the racism," Zaro said.
Elite Mazeh, a mother of three and also a member of the club's management who regularly takes her young children to games, said the club was open to all players.
"At Nordia racism and violence do not exist. We accept anyone, including Muslim players," she said.
Zaken, 36, said he was happy to end his playing days at the club.
"The Nordia crowd is a positive group. I didn't know that there was such a good fan base when I played at Beitar and I'm happy to be part of it. The negative influence of La Familia is totally eclipsed by the positive fans here," he said.