'Palestine exists' for a diaspora football club in Chile

Chile is home to the largest Palestinian community outside the Arab world and as the community grew, a football club was founded in 1920.

Palestino fans cheer for their team during the Chilean national championship football match between Palestino and Everton at the La Cisterna municipal stadium in Santiago on November 23, 2023. / Photo: AFP
AFP

Palestino fans cheer for their team during the Chilean national championship football match between Palestino and Everton at the La Cisterna municipal stadium in Santiago on November 23, 2023. / Photo: AFP

Thousands of miles from the Middle East, in a stadium in Santiago, Chile, the nation of Palestine exists, if only for the 90 minutes of a football match.

Chileans and Palestinians created that alternate reality again on Thursday when Club Deportivo Palestino, which traces its origins to Palestinian immigrants who came to the South American nation in the early 1900s, held a tribute for the Palestinian victims of the Israeli war on Gaza.

A banner reading "In memory of those who are no longer with us" was displayed in the stands, where a section of seats was left empty to represent the dead.

"We decided to have a space in our grandstand and leave it empty... as a gesture of support for the Palestinian people and what is happening in Gaza," club president Jorge Uauy said.

Chile is home to the largest Palestinian community outside the Arab world, with the first immigrants arriving from Bethlehem, Beit Jala and Beit Sahour. As the community — now estimated to number 500,000 — grew, the football club was founded in 1920.

AFP

Palestinian football club pays tribute to Palestinian victims in Gaza.

'Closeness to Palestine'

The players took to the field in green, white and red striped jerseys, adorned with a map of the territory before the establishment of Israel, and observed a minute of silence.

Children wearing keffiyehs accompanied them. In a previous match, the players had worn the traditional Palestinian scarves themselves.

"There are different ways of expressing pain and closeness to Palestine. Today it was the children as a way of showing that they are the most affected," said Uauy.

"We hope (Palestinians) will see that there are people in other parts of the world who are looking out for them and who are suffering for them."

Nearly 15,000 people have been killed in Gaza, most of them women and children, since the Israeli military bombardment and land invasion launched following Hamas attack on Israeli towns near Gaza on October 7.

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'Very attached'

The colourful club supporters made their own tributes in the stands. "Gaza resists, Palestine exists," the fans shouted, along with the sound of drums and trumpets.

But 11 minutes into the game they stopped, so a lone trumpet could blare a funeral melody.

"We give them a little joy," said fan Jorge Yarur, 57.

Journalism student Benjamin Contardo, 20, says that fans are "very attached to the Palestinian cause."

"For us, Palestine is more than a team... It is a whole people, and we want to represent the voice of all of them," he said.

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