In every match played by the Palestinian national team in the 2025 Arab Cup, one scene repeats itself, unlike any other scene in football tournaments: thousands of Palestinian flags fly above the stands, cheered on by fans from every Arab country, as if Palestine is the only team that belongs to everyone.
This is no longer a matter of fleeting sympathy or a wave of emotion linked to events, but has become an explicit Arab phenomenon: Arabs cheer for Palestine, even when Palestine is the opponent of their own teams.
Palestine: the team that represents the Arab conscience
This unprecedented situation – where the loser does not grieve in front of Palestine, nor does the team that draws with it get angry, but rather applauds it – reveals that Palestine in this tournament is not so much a sports team as it is a meaning, a symbol, and an emotional compass.
For decades, Palestine has remained the cause that unites what politics divides. But what is happening today on the football pitch of the Arab Cup has gone beyond slogans to the actual practice of belonging.
The crowds at the Arab Cup cheering for Palestine do so because they feel that this team is also playing on their behalf.
A victory for the idea of justice before football
Palestine is the only team that enters the field laden with a long history of pain and resilience, and the crowds come out to say: ‘We are with you, because you represent what we have been unable to say in politics, in the media, or in the decision-making arenas.’
This support is not a courtesy, but a conviction: an emotional uprising that the public expresses with one voice.
Arab fans do not need to be Palestinian to support Palestine, because the cause that the national team players carry is not just colours on a shirt, but the daily wounds experienced by the people of Gaza and the West Bank.
Every goal scored by a Palestinian player in the Arab Cup is transformed in the minds of the fans into a victory for a child who survived Israel’s bombing, a family that persevered in tents, or a young man who lost his home but not his dream.
That is why, when an Arab team loses to Palestine, many say sincerely: ‘If we must lose, let it be to Palestine.’
Stadiums at the Arab Cup: a free space where the public can say what they want
At a time when official and political arenas seem restricted, fans have found in Arab Cup stadiums a real space to express their sympathy, belonging, anger and rejection.
The stands have become the only place where fans can cheer for Palestine without reservation, raising the Palestinian flag above their own national flags in a scene that is not repeated in any other tournament.
It is a living referendum: Palestine remains at the centre of Arab consciousness.
What adds to the depth of the scene is that this Palestinian team is facing teams with strong clubs, stable leagues and enormous infrastructure, while its players come from besieged cities, destroyed stadiums and a suspended league – all thanks to genocidal Israel.
Nevertheless, they fight every Arab Cup match as if it were a battle for survival, performing beyond the limits of what is possible.
Here, Arab fans see the Palestinian team as the embodiment of true victory: rising above all odds, playing despite the circumstances, and defying the impossible.
More than encouragement – a declaration of belonging from the Arab Cup
What is happening in the Arab Cup this year is not just a sporting phenomenon, but an emotional human movement that transcends the boundaries of the green rectangle.
It is a clear declaration from the fans: Palestine is not a distant country, nor is it a cause that concerns only one people, but rather a part of the entire Arab identity.
Therefore, when tens of thousands chant ‘Palestine’ from different countries and in different accents, it is not just encouragement… it is the protection of memory, a compass for conscience, and a message that says: this team plays for the entire nation.
In the 2025 Arab Cup, Palestine was not just a team looking for points, but the story of an entire nation being told on the green grass.
And when the entire Arab crowd chose to cheer for it, they were clearly saying: “This team is playing on behalf of all of us, and this flag will not fall.
Featured image via the Canary












