So Honduras has
qualified for the 2014 Brazil World Cup and the football craziness has been
replaced by just as noisy political campaigns for the upcoming elections. But
let’s not talk about politics and return to football instead…
There’s
no denying that football unites people. After the recent qualifications even
political differences were temporarily put aside and everybody joined in the
celebrations. Being Dutch, that’s no news for me. An orange wave spills over my
home land as soon as the national team is up for an important game. I can’t
help but get excited here in Honduras
when I hear the (mispronounced) names of the Dutch players announced, or the
first notes of our national anthem. I don’t feel particularly Dutch, am not
necessarily proud of serendipitously being born as a citizen of the Netherlands and
couldn’t care less if you insult my country or fellow Netherlanders. I’ve been
living more than half of my adult life in Honduras and even know the entire
national anthem by heart, whereas I can only mumble the first two phrases of
the Dutch one. However, as soon as La
Naranja Mecánica is about to kick off, my heart starts racing and I’m a
hundred percent Dutch again! So why is it that I don’t identify with blond,
blue-eyed girls dancing on wooden shoes, Edam
cheese and not even the Great Masters of the Dutch Renaissance, but I do with
eleven guys dressed in orange, running after a ball?
A
couple of years ago there was an interesting discussion going on in IS, a magazine published by the Dutch Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, about cultural identity. The question was in how far people
adapt to their adoptive country and how much they identify with it. One of the
readers sent in a letter in which he summed it up nicely, saying he had been
living in China
for 25 years, had a Chinese wife, Chinese kids and a Chinese job. He eats
Chinese, thinks, talks and dreams in Mandarin, but oooohhh when there’s Dutch
football on TV: Hollaaaaaaaaaand!!!
I
really have no idea where this collective craziness comes from that turns even
the most intellectual academics in silly morons with orange hats and face
paint, but it exceeds borders and even continents (except for the US of course,
where strangely enough our football has never been a big thing. But they have
their own football. And baseball of course). But as intense as it is, it’s also
not very long lasting. Especially when our national team loses, we tend to
quickly forget about the whole thing, or turn all together against a collective
enemy. (Usually the Germans for the Dutch and Mexico for all other Central
American countries.) That way the bond of being “one” lingers a little longer,
but eventually it dissolves in thin air. Until it is ignited again by the next
World Cup or Champions League.
Honduras is unfortunately a country
with few heroes or role models, in neither past nor present. Whereas Nicaragua
has its share of revolutionary heroes; Guatemala a Nobel prize winner in Rogobert
Manchú; Venezuela an (in)famous reappearing dead president; Argentina the Pope and Messi; and Colombia has Shakira,
Honduran citizens never made it to the realms of fame and eternal illustriousness.
Maybe that’s why Honduras
goes so crazy when the national team is doing well for a change. Every
Honduran, men, women, children, rich and poor, including a bunch of ex-pats,
get over-excited and proudly discuss the game as if it were they themselves running
into a sweat for an hour and a half. It makes people proud to be Honduran. And
whether that’s a good or bad thing, well, that’s a whole different discussion…
Bottom-line
is, I’m very excited that both Honduras
and Holland are
qualified for the World Cup and can’t wait for it to start. But what if Honduras will have to face Holland??? I can’t tell you now which team I’d
support… I mean.. I wish…. No, I can’t decide! I guess it will be the moment my
true identity will be revealed…
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