CROATIA
Group Therapy: A Nation is Born
By Courtney Angela Brkic
Not so long ago, when Croatia was part of Yugoslavia, soccer was an expression
of ethnicity, of political orientation, of self. Many feel that a 1990 match
between Zagreb's Dinamo and Belgrade's Red Star marked the beginning of
Croatia's war for independence. At the beginning of the match, fans from both
sides clashed in the stands and on the field. The Serb-dominated police beat
Croatian fans while allowing Serb fans to run amok, and the events caused the
already bubbling frustrations with Yugoslavia to boil over. Even the players
were not immune. Upon witnessing a policeman beating a fallen Dinamo fan,
midfielder Zvonimir Boban karate-kicked him, becoming a hero of the growing
independence movement.
The war that followed was long and brutal. More than ten thousand people were
killed, and one thousand are still missing today. Not surprisingly, tourists
stopped visiting the Croatian coast, and the region became associated with
suffering. For a country so rich in potential, so enthusiastic about what it
could achieve now that it was on its own, being classified simply as a war zone
or a former Yugoslav republic was a blow.
Croatia's independence was recognized in 1992, but the 1998 World Cup brought
another form of recognition. Elation had already begun to sweep the country
when Croatia beat powerhouse Germany in the quarterfinals. "Is it really
possible?" people seemed to be asking one another, unable to contain their
optimism. In Zagreb, large-screen televisions were set up on the city squares
so people could watch the Croatia-Netherlands third-place match in raucous
groups. It was a Saturday, and I watched in my apartment with friends, drifting
out to the balcony to listen to the excited conversations and shouts coming
from the cafés below. The sound of cheers filled the air when Croatia scored.
It was like the city was one gigantic living room, everyone's eyes on a single
television set. Traffic all but stopped, and the street below was empty. When
the game finished with Croatia the winner, people flooded the streets. They
filled the main square, and that night, all night, we heard happy, drunken
voices singing.
Coming nearly three years after the war ended, it was an emotional moment in a
young country's history. On television, reporters interviewed grown men who
could not stop weeping. The country had not seen such unified celebration since
its declaration of independence. Now no one could deny Croatia its place on the
map.
(Courtney Angela Brkic is the author of Stillness: And Other Stories and
The Stone Fields: An Epitaph for the Living.)
Adapted from The Thinking Fan's Guide to the World Cup, edited by Matt
Weiland and Sean Wilsey. HarperCollins, 2006. Printed with
permission.