(sorry for the source, it’s the most detailed article I’ve found)
*“When I knew Elensky is of an Israeli nationality, I quit the table without hesitation, despite organizers’ assurances that he is French,” Hamedi told IslamOnline.net on Wednesday, May 21.
He said that he could not compete before a Player whose nationals “commit daily aggressions against innocent Palestinians, killing children and women.”*
Using that logic, Hamedi from Yemen will not compete against me in a ping pong game because his nationals helped blow up the USS Cole.
Come on… it’s table tennis. It’s ping-pong. And they’re trying to make a political statement. The only statement really shown to the world is “I’m an assclown who doesn’t want to play an Israeli.”
Then again, you do some pretty wacky stuff when you’ve been taught to hate Israel.
I agree with you. It would be good if at least people can put their differences aside for sports. Then again the USA boycotted the Olympic games to protest the Soviet intervention on Afghanistan.
he’s not an assclown for standing to his convictions, but I don’t think he should have made his stand if elensky was representing a different country than Israel.
I would also argue that people can do pretty wacky stuff when they’ve been taught to hate Palestinians, like allowing terrorists to sink the only hope your country has in acheiving security and peace.
But it’s all off-topic anyways. From somebody who decided to talk about “Israelis hating Palestineans” instead of Yemenis and Saudis refusing to face a man because he’s from Israel
If Elensky was of Israeli origin, but was repatriated to France, and represented the French national team, then the two Arab competitors would be wrong to boycott a match against Elensky on the grounds that he was Israeli.
A political statement is only valid if directed against a representative of the nation itself. If Elansky was repatriated, he would be representing France, not Israel.
As it stands, The two arabs are wrong, as Elensky wasn’t there as a representative of Israel. He was there as an individual. It wasn’t representing Israel.