Team Focus: Assyriska
Fans often attempt to show their dedication to their club by claiming that it is truly a part of who they are. In most cases, this is simple cliché. But not with the fans of Swedish club Assyriska. Many of these supporters are members of Assyrian diaspora living around the world. Assyriska has come to represent them, as a national team for minority group with no nation.

Assyriska fans hold up a giant Assyrian flag in support of their team
Assyriska was founded in 1974 by Assyrian immigrants to Sweden. Most of the founding members worked at a local truck factory who formed the club to play soccer in their free time. From those modest beginnings, the club slowly rose through the ranks of Swedish soccer.
In 2003, they made it to the Swedish Cup final, losing to established power Elfsborg. One year later, the team of founded by Assyrian immigrant factory workers won promotion to the Swedish Premier Division. The reaction was pure jubilation. The club marketing director Robil Haidari said, “At that moment we just felt such enormous joy, I figured everybody in the world is Assyrian now, even God is Assyrian, or at least a supporter.”
Assyrian residents of the town of Södertälje, the Swedish town where Assyriska are from, were similarly overwhelmed. Local resident Abraham Staifo attempted to explain his emotions:
It encouraged the young ones to feel pride in being what they are, and brought tears to the eyes of the elderly. It was so much more than just football. The Assyrian people have few opportunities to express themselves. We felt our hearts would shoot out from our chests. That is why the elderly cried.
Reaching these dizzying heights brought recognition to the team, not least among the estimated 2 million Assyrians living around the world. Club president Zeiki Bisso told FIFA’s website, “For all of us who were oppressed in our home countries for many years … this felt superb, it was something every Assyrian wanted to take pride in.”
Indeed, at times it seemed like nearly every Assyrian did take pride in the club’s success. Its matches were broadcast in 83 countries and the diaspora spoke about the team in glowing terms. Assyriska team scarves began to appear far from Sweden, including by Nick Dinkha, a Toronto resident.

The pride fans around the world expressed in Assyriska has everything to do with the often sad history of the Assyrian people. The Assyrians are indigenous to current-day Iraq and have lived there for thousands of years. They were one of the first groups to convert to Christianity. Even as many around them in the Middle East later converted to Islam, Assyrians continued to practice their religion.
Assyrians’ historical relationship with their neighbors is fraught with flare-ups of violence. Assyrians have been the subject of campaigns of oppression that has risen to the level of mass murder on several occasions. In 2003, political analyst Jonathan Eric Lewis wrote in Middle East Quarterly that of the events of 1915 when up to two-thirds of the Assyrian community of southeastern Turkey and northern Iran was physically decimated in a matter of months. Lewis also documents a 1933 event in which nearly 3000 people were killed by Iraqi and Kurdish fighters, the anniversary of which is a national day of mourning for Assyrians around the world.

Ottoman soldiers stand over the bodies of murdered Assyrians
In Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, things were not much better. Speaking the Assyrian language and advocating Assyrian nationalism were both criminalized. Many left the country and this exodus has accelerated since the US overthrew Hussein in 2003. The violence in Iraq is often described as a battle between Sunnis and Shiites, but Iraqi Christians have been intimidated and murdered across the country. When prominent Iraqi Assyrian leader Isaac Esho Alhelani was murdered earlier this month, he joined the ranks of many Christians targeted for their beliefs or their perceived wealth. Assyrians account for only three to five percent of the Iraqi population, but have accounted for roughly 40 percent of that country’s refugees.
Those leaving Iraq today are going to countries with established Assyrian populations. The United States has around 83,000 Assyrians, Jordan 77,000, and Sweden is third among diaspora countries with 35,000 Assyrians. Despite the growing numbers of Assyrians living around the world, many wish for their own country.
It is into this statelessness that a small Swedish soccer club founded by Assyrian immigrants entered. entered. Many claim Assyriska’s popularity is due to it being seen as a pseudo-national team. Club president Zeki Bisso says that “Assyriska feels like a national team for the entire [Assyrian] group.”
Assyriska has since been relegated back to the second division in Sweden. Its importance, however, has not been diminished. For the Assyrian population around the world, Assyriska is not just a soccer team; it is the most visible expression of national pride for an oppressed people without a nation.

Assyriska players celebrate after a goal
Further Information
A movie about Assyriska called A Team Without a Nation was made in 2006. I have not seen it, but would love to hear about it if anyone has.

March 19th, 2007 07:26
Great work. You have done your homework very good. Who helped you whit the information ?
March 19th, 2007 20:48
Assyrian - Thanks for the compliment. I did the research myself, using a database of newspaper archives, Wikipedia, and Google searching. It’s amazing what the Internet has to offer!
I think I originally saw a piece on the TV show Futbol Mundial about Assyriska and finally got around to writing about the team.
March 20th, 2007 11:31
very nice text,,,,i think that the video assyriska landslag utan land is on youtube.com … at least one of the five parts.
March 20th, 2007 20:36
Babel - Forgive my lack of Swedish, but what is assyriska landslag utan? Is that the full name of the team?
March 21st, 2007 16:57
David “assyriska landslagutan land” is the Swedish title of the movie “A Team Without a Nation”
David thank you for the article it is very good.
March 21st, 2007 17:11
Hyperiam - Thanks!
November 4th, 2007 15:41
Mick McChannaman - Assyriska Manager (on FM 2007!)
November 4th, 2007 15:45
McChannaman - I love FM (or did before I started grad school). Out of curiosity, are you only signing Assyrian players in your game or anybody regardless of ethnicity?
December 9th, 2007 05:28
David,
Great article! Here you can watch the documentary:
http://video.google.nl/videoplay?docid=-1977041638288252478
Greets,
Log-isch
December 14th, 2007 09:23
assyrian fan from holland!!!
assyriska signs everybody! kennedy bakircioglu (Ajax Amsterdam) is assyrian and started over there. but now most of the players are not assyrian. although there are assyrian players in de premier league of sweden. ifk goteborg. halmstadt. djurgardens. in the top three teams and some others!! that’s cool too.
March 2nd, 2008 06:22
Great club, and great article!
October 25th, 2008 04:45
Assyriska lu motuuuuuuuuuuuuu