Shireen Ahmed exposes a jarring contradiction at the heart of modern sports governance: the World Flying Disc Federation (WFDF) champions a culture of self-regulation and moral integrity, yet permits active military personnel from a nation accused of genocide to compete while ignoring the annihilation of Palestinian athletes. This piece is not merely about a tournament in Portugal; it is a forensic examination of how sporting bodies apply ethical standards selectively, prioritizing geopolitical comfort over the very "Spirit of the Game" they claim to protect.
The Paradox of the Spirit of the Game
Ahmed begins by grounding the reader in the unique ethos of Ultimate, a sport where players act as their own referees and prioritize conflict resolution over victory. She notes that the federation seeks to "promote and protect the Spirit of the Game of flying disc play," a code that embeds self-regulation and joy into the sport. This framing is crucial because it sets a high bar for conduct that the federation is now failing to meet. The author argues that the presence of active Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers in the World Beach Ultimate Championships (WBUC) sends a "troubling message that while fairness and sportsmanship may be upheld on the field, the realities of occupation, ethnic cleansing, and a range of other human rights abuses and war crimes are disregarded in the context of their actions back home."
This argument gains weight when contrasted with the history of the sport's expansion. Just as the sporting boycott of South Africa during the apartheid era eventually forced a reckoning with institutional racism, the current crisis demands a similar moral clarity. Ahmed points out that the federation's refusal to act is not an oversight but a choice. She writes, "The presence of active Israeli soldiers is not only upsetting to those affected by incessant terror unleashed in the region, it is an affront to any who values and respects basic human rights." The juxtaposition of a beach tournament in the Algarve with the devastation in Gaza creates a visceral dissonance that the author refuses to let the reader ignore.
The decision to forfeit by the French team represents a significant act of moral courage precisely because the WFDF, unlike its response against Russia, has refrained from taking a principled position against the Gaza genocide and the slaughter of Palestinian athletes.
The Human Cost and the Hypocrisy of Silence
The commentary shifts from abstract principles to concrete human tragedy. Ahmed details the loss of life within the Palestinian Ultimate community, noting that Muhammad Shakir, a youth coach, was killed in November 2023, followed by Yousef al-Heela in April 2024. The author emphasizes that over 800 athletes have been killed since October 2023, a statistic that renders the federation's "lacklustre response"—a broad condemnation of violence without specific action—morally insufficient. Ahmed writes, "In an environment where the prevailing institutional stance is that competition with Israel should continue—often under the justification that 'sports should not mix with politics'—the French team's refusal to play is a deliberate challenge to that double standard."
This section is particularly powerful because it highlights the agency of the athletes themselves. While the governing body hesitates, teams from France, Colombia, and Turkey have chosen to forfeit their matches against Israel. Ahmed frames this not as a disruption, but as an ethical imperative. She quotes Daniel Bannoura, founder of Ultimate Palestine, who notes that the French team's action highlights an "ethical will and courageous spirit" that the federation lacks. The author effectively uses these forfeitures to demonstrate that the "Spirit of the Game" is being upheld by the players, not the administrators.
Critics might argue that excluding a national team from a sporting event sets a dangerous precedent for the politicization of athletics, potentially fragmenting international competition. However, Ahmed counters this by pointing to the federation's own precedent: the swift ban of Russia and Belarus following the invasion of Ukraine. She writes, "We must remember the strong actions and public statements made by WFDF against Russia in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine." By applying the same logic used for Ukraine, the author argues that the exclusion of Israeli military personnel would be a matter of regulatory consistency, not special treatment.
A Voice from the Rubble
The piece concludes with the perspective of Enas Saada, an Ultimate coach in Gaza who continues to organize despite the bombardment. Her testimony provides the emotional anchor for the entire argument. Ahmed writes, "It feels like the world is celebrating while we struggle for the most basic rights: the right to life, the right to play, and the right to dream." This quote encapsulates the central tragedy: the global community's ability to enjoy sport while a specific population is denied the very existence that makes sport possible. Saada's observation that "the world sometimes only listens to the loudest voice, not the most just one" serves as a stinging critique of the power dynamics within international sports federations.
Ahmed suggests that the WFDF's inaction reflects a "long-standing colonial and orientalist posture that disregards the humanity and dignity of peoples and groups from the Global South." This framing elevates the issue from a single tournament dispute to a systemic failure of international institutions. The author notes that while the federation was quick to protect European athletes in Ukraine, they have remained silent on the "slaughter of Palestinian ultimate players and coaches."
The lack of support from the WFDF for Palestinian players and coaches is painful. Considering the immense talent and potential in Gaza and the West Bank that goes unseen due to political restrictions, the blockade, or neglect from international bodies.
Bottom Line
Shireen Ahmed's most compelling contribution is her ability to expose the hollowness of "neutral" sports governance when faced with active genocide, using the specific, high-minded ethics of Ultimate as a mirror to reflect institutional cowardice. The piece's greatest vulnerability lies in its reliance on the assumption that sporting bodies possess the political will to enforce such sanctions, a hope that history suggests is often misplaced. Readers should watch for whether the forfeitures by national teams force the WFDF to reconsider its stance or if the federation doubles down on its current path of selective morality.