A Sporting Chance
Level playing field, it’s not cricket, the ball
is in your court, calling the shots, front runner, down to the wire, hitting
below the belt, jumping the gun, taking sides, out of one’s league, a sporting
chance, throwing in the towel - these are just some of the terms in daily use
that indicate the central role of sports in the social psyche.
There has been no civilization or nation that did not
integrate sports and games in their social life. Sports generally refer to competitive
physical activities, while games include mental or physical activities that are
played for enjoyment.
The Ancient Greeks introduced formal sports to the world with the first
Olympic Games held in 776 BC, with events such as foot and chariot races,
wrestling, jumping, and discus and javelin throwing. Many Greek sculptures and paintings immortalized
these activities, which were a celebration of the perfect human body. They
believed their gods took human form, and celebrating the perfect human body was
an offering to the gods. The concepts of agon (struggle, competition) and nike
(victory) were essential components of Greek life, and soon became reflective
of the ideal human who was disciplined, capable and ethical. The modern Olympics were revived in 1894 in
France, inspired by Thomas Arnold’s introduction of sports as “athletic
chivalry” in the curriculum of Rugby school in England. The new Olympics were
to be a reflection of a “muscular Christianity”.
Sports is also considered the best training for war. It inculcates
bonding, agility, strategy, physical strength and endurance. George Orwell
called sport ‘war minus the shooting’.
In 1919, after WWI, the first Interallied Games were held as a
public event in Paris which developed into the International Military Sports
Council in 1948 after WWII. The IMSC games are still held every four years, one
year before the Olympics, with 140 nations competing, including Pakistan that
has won a number of events. The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) founded
its first professional sports teams in 1951.
Even non-military sports events are strongly nationalistic, with
national anthems played at the start of each match, and national flags
prominently displayed. Sports become an alternative to war, an acceptable form
of inter-nation aggression, Pakistan-India and USA- Russia games being the best-known
examples. The defeat of Boris Spassky of
the Soviet Union, by the American Bobby Fischer at chess in 1972 was seen as nothing
less than a military triumph.
Politics and sports have often overlapped. The boxer, Muhammad
Ali, refused to fight in the Vietnam War amid the Civil Rights Movement. Sports
was used to isolate South Africa to censure its Apartheid policy. Taking a knee
in football has become a protest against racism since 2020 after the killing of
George Lloyd in USA. The Moroccan football team displayed the
Palestinian flag in the Qatar world cup with each win. The move for gender
equality has seen the growth of women’s sports, harking back to the warring
Amazons and the Scythian women archers, challenging all male sports.
Canada, Britain and Australia have the largest number of
sportspersons who have entered politics. George Weah, one of Africa’s greatest
footballers, became president of Liberia the same year as the cricketer, Imran
Khan, became Prime Minister of Pakistan. Journalist Mazhar Abbas says the
political vocabulary of Pakistani politics has changed to include sports terms
such as “kaptan” (captain), “umpire”, “third umpire”, “match-fixing”,
“wickets”, “ground” and “unfit”.
Buzkashi originally played by Turkic people of North Afghanistan,
had no rules and was a training ground for a style of military raids, perhaps
still influencing the Mujahidin style of warfare.
Chess or shatranj pieces reflect its political nature - shah
(king) ferz (counselor) rukh ( chariot) fil (elephant) faras (horse) piyadeh, (infantryman) . The Queen became the most
powerful piece in the European version during the reign of Medieval Queens.
Shahmat (the king is dead) became checkmate.
The most popular video games have war themes, including one that
allows players to recreate the capture of Osama Bin Laden, introduced just a
week after the real event.
The militaristic colouring of sports and games, reflecting the
tussle for cultural domination, overshadows the value of games for children,
such as gilli danda, kanchay, pithoo, that teach hand-eye coordination, scientific thinking, problem-solving, collaboration,
teamwork, and leadership.
This aggressive competitiveness, and the enormous $500 billion a
year sports economy, is a far cry from the concept expressed by Thomas Aquinas
of games being “rest for the soul”.
Durriya Kazi
December 16, 2022
Karachi
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