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Morocco semi-finals of the World Cup

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‘It makes us proud’: London’s Morocco fans celebrate reaching World Cup semi-finals 

The Atlas Lions’ victory over Portugal brought joy to the African, Arab and Amazigh diaspora 

As Morocco’s Zakaria Aboukhlal prostrated himself on the manicured football pitch on Saturday after his side became the first African or Arab country to reach the semi-finals of a World Cup, the streets of London erupted in celebration as supporters basked in the Atlas Lions’ historic triumph.

On west London’s Golborne Road, women wearing hijabs roared with jubilation as they raised their arms in the air with red and green Moroccan flags fluttering like sails behind them.


Chants of “Olé, olé, olé” and the explosions of fireworks could be heard on Edgware Road, where traffic came to a standstill and even sub-zero temperatures could not stop ecstatic fans from taking to the streets to dance and sing.

From Ladbroke Grove to the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem to Baghdad, Morocco’s victory has been a collective cause to celebrate for the African, Arab and Amazigh diaspora.

The triumph has brought joy to spectators around the world in the form of Moroccan matriarchs who have become the unofficial champions of the 2022 World Cup.

Videos of the forward Sofiane Boufal dancing with his mother after Saturday’s quarter-final victory against Portugal and the PSG defender Achraf Hakimi’s mum giving him a kiss on the cheek after his winning penalty against Spain in the last 16 have garnered global adulation.

Nadia Boujettef, a British-Moroccan local leader from north Kensington, helped co-organise a public match-watching event on Golborne Road on Saturday.

As the daughter of Moroccan immigrants who helped found the first Moroccan community centre in the area, the 42-year-old said she was overjoyed to see women who looked like her mother “at the forefront of everything”.

“It makes us proud,” Boujettef said. “Our parents, especially our mothers, they are the rock of a Moroccan family.

“They came here in the late 50s and 60s. English was a barrier, but they integrated, and they built north Kensington.”


Some of the volunteers brought together former Grenfell Tower residents, as well as people in the area who had no connection to Morocco. “We were all Moroccan [for the game],” Boujettef added.

Revelling in the euphoric glow of Morocco’s latest victory, British-Moroccan fan Hashim Wahbi, whose parents are of Moroccan origin, celebrated on Sunday by marching through Piccadilly Circus dressed in the national team’s football kit while beating a drum.

Although Wahbi had spent many holidays in Morocco as a child, he felt disconnected from particular aspects of the country’s culture as a member of the diaspora. It was the national team’s victory that renewed his pride in his Moroccan heritage. “It brought my Moroccan identity to the forefront,” said the 29-year-old.



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‘It makes us proud’: London’s Morocco fans celebrate reaching World Cup semi-finals 

The Atlas Lions’ victory over Portugal brought joy to the African, Arab and Amazigh diaspora 

As Morocco’s Zakaria Aboukhlal prostrated himself on the manicured football pitch on Saturday after his side became the first African or Arab country to reach the semi-finals of a World Cup, the streets of London erupted in celebration as supporters basked in the Atlas Lions’ historic triumph.

On west London’s Golborne Road, women wearing hijabs roared with jubilation as they raised their arms in the air with red and green Moroccan flags fluttering like sails behind them.


Chants of “Olé, olé, olé” and the explosions of fireworks could be heard on Edgware Road, where traffic came to a standstill and even sub-zero temperatures could not stop ecstatic fans from taking to the streets to dance and sing.

From Ladbroke Grove to the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem to Baghdad, Morocco’s victory has been a collective cause to celebrate for the African, Arab and Amazigh diaspora.

The triumph has brought joy to spectators around the world in the form of Moroccan matriarchs who have become the unofficial champions of the 2022 World Cup.

Videos of the forward Sofiane Boufal dancing with his mother after Saturday’s quarter-final victory against Portugal and the PSG defender Achraf Hakimi’s mum giving him a kiss on the cheek after his winning penalty against Spain in the last 16 have garnered global adulation.

Nadia Boujettef, a British-Moroccan local leader from north Kensington, helped co-organise a public match-watching event on Golborne Road on Saturday.

As the daughter of Moroccan immigrants who helped found the first Moroccan community centre in the area, the 42-year-old said she was overjoyed to see women who looked like her mother “at the forefront of everything”.

“It makes us proud,” Boujettef said. “Our parents, especially our mothers, they are the rock of a Moroccan family.

“They came here in the late 50s and 60s. English was a barrier, but they integrated, and they built north Kensington.”


Some of the volunteers brought together former Grenfell Tower residents, as well as people in the area who had no connection to Morocco. “We were all Moroccan [for the game],” Boujettef added.

Revelling in the euphoric glow of Morocco’s latest victory, British-Moroccan fan Hashim Wahbi, whose parents are of Moroccan origin, celebrated on Sunday by marching through Piccadilly Circus dressed in the national team’s football kit while beating a drum.

Although Wahbi had spent many holidays in Morocco as a child, he felt disconnected from particular aspects of the country’s culture as a member of the diaspora. It was the national team’s victory that renewed his pride in his Moroccan heritage. “It brought my Moroccan identity to the forefront,” said the 29-year-old.



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