Paymann Moin
Is the political game finally over?
his
past Sunday, Iran played America in a soccer match at the Rose Bowl.
The game ended
in a tie at 1.
Let's try that
again: This past Sunday, Iran played America in a soccer match at the Rose
Bowl. The game ended with two nations coming one step nearer to ending
nearly a quarter of a century of icy relations.
It was
impossible to ignore the political circumstances of the match and not dwell
on the hype surrounding the soccer game. Iranians both in their homeland
and abroad knew very well what the game meant. Though not nearing most
Iranians' level of interest, Americans, too, seemed aware of the match.
Certainly many televisions in Washington, D.C. were tuned to the game.
Iran's tour of
the Americas began with little fanfare. The Iranian community watched the
team closely as it played Mexico and Ecuador in the week prior to the U.S.
game. Both of those matches, also played in California, were considered
warm-ups for the rematch of the 1998 World Cup game with the United States.
It doesn't matter that Iran lost to Mexico and beat Ecuador; the game that
counted was this past Sunday.
For many
Iranians, this game was a glimpse of things that many hope for in the
future. With much of the Western world having turned its back on Iran since
the Islamic Revolution in 1979, Iranians are eager to again become accepted
as a respected national entity throughout the world. Slowly, Europe and
Asia have come to understand this different, theocratic Iran. Yet the
biggest hurdle to normalcy - resuming friendly relations with the United
States - still remains.
Accordingly,
Iranians showed their enthusiasm for the game and for their national team.
More than 50,000 Iranians attended the game. Many flew in from other parts
of the United States. Some even came from Europe. A devoted crowd followed
the team from Iran. Yet the overwhelming majority was from amongst the more
than 500,000 Iranian Americans that live in the southern California area,
people who, culturally speaking, crossed the two national borders.
The game meant
the most to these people. Many left their homeland after the Islamic
Revolution and re-established themselves here, in the United States.
Through the years, roots from this new nation grew alongside those of their
mother nation. A mixture of Iranian heritage and American culture, these
people are torn between two politically and ideologically divided
nations.
Normalization of
relations with Iran would mean a unification of the split identity many
Iranian Americans feel. Living a sort of temporary life in cultural limbo,
Iranian Americans are not sure of with whom to ally themselves. They like
this new nation, but also long for the familiarities of Iran. If things
remain the way they are, many Iranian Americans in this situation will
remain in this "temporary" state permanently.
That's precisely
why things cannot remain the way they are. For more than 20 years, many of
these people have been at the mercy of political uncertainty. Iranian
Americans want to know what the future holds for them and their children.
This soccer game gave them an inkling of what may be to come.
During the past
year, several American teams have traveled to Iran. The Saturday before
this soccer game, an assortment of American wrestlers arrived in Tehran to
compete in a week-long tournament. One can only hope that this sports
diplomacy will lead to more meaningful political exchanges.
Progress has
been slow thus far, but it has also been steady. Just before Sunday's game,
Iran's governing body of soccer officially invited the American soccer team
to Tehran for a match in March 2001. All indications seem to point to the
United States accepting this invitation.
Hopefully,
before the next match political maneuvering between Washington and Tehran
can yield some scores of its own. Leaders of both nations seem willing to
meet. The overture needs only be made; an acceptance seems imminent.
It is best that
Iran and America are going head to head on the soccer field rather than the
battlefield. If form holds and future exhibitions between the two nations
yield similar friendly results, the final score will not be of consequence,
as everyone will come out a winner.

Paymann Moin is a graduate student in biomedical
engineering.
Copyright 2000 by the Daily Trojan. All rights reserved.
This article was published in Vol. 139, No. 05 (Wednesday, January 19, 2000), beginning on page 4 and ending on page 9.