For decades, Islam has been treated by many European politicians, media outlets and far-right movements as something foreign to the continent. It has been framed as an outsider faith, a threat to “European identity”, or a problem to be managed rather than a reality to be understood.
But on football’s biggest stage, a new generation of Muslim players is exposing the weakness of that narrative.
At a World Cup featuring several Muslim-majority nations and a global Muslim population of around two billion people, public expressions of Islamic faith should not shock anyone. Yet what has unsettled many observers is not only the presence of Muslim players from Muslim-majority countries, but the confidence of Muslim footballers representing European nations that still struggle to accept Islam as part of their own social fabric.
This is where the debate becomes bigger than football.
Sujood on the World Stage
Lamine Yamal, the teenage star of Spain and FC Barcelona, became one of the most talked-about names of the tournament after scoring his first World Cup goal against Saudi Arabia. His celebration was simple, powerful and deeply Islamic: he went into sujood, placing his forehead to the ground in gratitude to Allah.
For Muslims, sujood is not a political slogan. It is an act of worship, humility and thankfulness. It is the moment a servant is closest to his Lord. But in a Europe where Islam is often viewed through suspicion, even this pure expression of gratitude can become controversial.
Yamal had already faced hostility earlier in the year during a Spain friendly against Egypt in Barcelona, when sections of the crowd chanted: “Musulman el que no bote”, meaning, “Whoever does not jump is Muslim.”
His response was measured but firm: “I am Muslim alhamdulillah… Football for entertaining and uplifting people, not to show a lack of respect towards people because of what they believe.”
That response carried more dignity than the chant deserved.
Europe’s Identity Crisis
The chants aimed at Yamal did not emerge in isolation. Across Europe, far-right parties and, increasingly, mainstream political voices have spent years building a false binary: a supposedly Christian Europe against an allegedly foreign Islam.
This is both historically shallow and morally dishonest.
Christianity itself did not originate in Europe. It emerged in the same broad region of the world where Islam would later rise. The attempt to turn Europe into a purely religious or ethnic fortress is not a defence of truth, but a political project built on selective memory.
Muslim footballers are now disrupting that project without speeches, campaigns or manifestos. They are doing it by simply existing, excelling and refusing to hide their faith.
Antonio Rudiger and the Criminalisation of Muslim Symbols
Germany defender Antonio Rudiger faced similar hostility in 2024 after marking the beginning of Ramadan with an Instagram post in which he raised his index finger in a gesture of tawhid, the Islamic affirmation of the oneness of Allah.
For Muslims, the gesture is clear. It symbolises monotheism. It is not extremism. It is not a threat. It is not a call to violence.
Yet former Bild editor-in-chief Julian Reichelt claimed the gesture was linked to the so-called Islamic State group. Rudiger filed a legal complaint, accusing him of defamation and incitement to hatred.
The incident revealed a disturbing reality: in some parts of Europe, even the most basic Islamic symbols can be distorted, criminalised or weaponised against Muslim public figures.
When a Muslim player hides his faith, he is told he has integrated. When he displays it, he is treated as suspicious.
That is not integration. That is coercion.
Yasin Ayari and the Question of Belonging
Sweden’s Yasin Ayari also found himself at the centre of this debate after scoring against Tunisia and celebrating with sujood.
Ayari’s background made the moment more layered. He has Tunisian roots, and the Tunisian Football Federation had previously tried to convince him to represent Tunisia. Out of respect for his father’s homeland, he kept his celebration muted and raised his hands as if asking forgiveness.
But instead of recognising the emotional complexity of the moment, critics focused on his faith, his heritage and whether he could truly be considered Swedish.
That question should never have been asked.
Ayari was born in Sweden. He grew up in Sweden. He represents Sweden. His father, Azouz, made that point clearly when explaining why he encouraged his son to play for the Swedish national team.
“My children are a part of Sweden,” he said. “My children were born in Sweden. My children’s friends are in Sweden. I’m an immigrant. Yasin is Swedish with a Tunisian background. So he has the right to play for Sweden.”
This is the reality many anti-Muslim voices refuse to accept: European Muslims are not guests waiting to leave. They are citizens, neighbours, athletes, professionals, students, families and contributors.
Their Islam does not cancel their nationality.
Converts and the Spread of Islam Through Conviction
The story is not limited to players born into Muslim families. A growing number of European footballers have embraced Islam through conviction.
Among the most prominent are Clarence Seedorf, Frederic Kanoute and Paul Pogba. Each came to Islam through his own journey, proving that Islam in Europe is not merely inherited through migration. It is also being discovered, studied and accepted by people searching for truth, discipline and meaning.
England’s Djed Spence has also become a powerful symbol. After making his senior England debut in a 5-0 World Cup qualifying win against Serbia, he became widely recognised as the first Muslim player to represent the England men’s senior team.
“I was surprised because I didn’t know I was the first, so it’s a blessing,” Spence said. “It’s good to make history and hopefully inspire young kids around the world that they can make it as well.”
For young Muslims in Europe, such moments matter. Representation is not just about fame. It tells Muslim children that they do not need to erase their names, their prayers, their families or their religion to belong.
Cape Verde’s Muslim Converts and the Beauty of Brotherhood
Cape Verde’s World Cup story added another powerful layer.
The small island nation is overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, yet several members of its historic squad are Muslims who embraced Islam during their professional careers in Europe.
Jamiro Monteiro converted in Rotterdam. Logan Costa, born in France, formally embraced Islam in 2020 after being influenced by Muslim teammates and his own spiritual search. Steven Moreira, also French-born, was influenced during his academy years by a practising Muslim teammate who prayed five times a day and fasted Ramadan.
Moreira later explained that he felt something changing inside him, but he feared how his family would react. Their response was moving: “You’re a better person now.”
He ended with the words Muslims know well: “Alhamdulillah.”
The Cape Verde trio had previously celebrated together with sujood at the Africa Cup of Nations. Their story is not one of division, but of unity. Within the Cape Verde squad, Muslim and Christian players have been respected, accommodated and treated as one team.
Halal food was provided during camps and tournaments. Their faith was not treated as a burden. It was respected as part of who they are.
Logan Costa captured that spirit clearly: “Whether we are Muslim or Christian, our strength is that we are together. We are all Cape Verdean.”
Islam Is Not Outside Europe
The lesson from this World Cup is not merely that Muslim footballers are talented. That has long been clear.
The deeper lesson is that Islam is already part of Europe. It is present in its stadiums, academies, neighbourhoods, schools, national teams and dressing rooms. It is present among children of immigrants and among converts. It is present in players who raise their index finger for tawhid, fast during Ramadan, ask for halal food, say alhamdulillah and fall into sujood after scoring.
The discomfort this creates among Islamophobes says more about Europe’s political anxiety than about Muslims themselves.
Muslim footballers are not asking for special treatment. They are asking for the same right others already enjoy: to be openly themselves.
And perhaps that is what makes their presence so powerful.
In a continent where Islam is too often debated by people who fear it, these players are showing another reality: Islam brings discipline, gratitude, humility, brotherhood and moral clarity.
On the pitch, they compete for their nations.
In sujood, they submit only to Allah.



