Renowned Palestinian footballer Suleiman al-Obeid murdered by Israel at aid distribution site

On August 6, the celebrated retired footballer Suleiman al-Obeid, known affectionately as the “Palestinian Pele” in reference to the great Brazilian player, was killed by Israeli gunfire while waiting for humanitarian aid in southern Gaza. He is survived by his wife and five children.

Al-Obeid represented Palestine—including as captain—in 24 international matches and played for the Gaza City club Khadamat Al-Shatea. A forward and winger, he scored more than 100 goals in his professional career, with one of his finest a scissor-kick in a game against Yemen during the 2010 West Asian Football Federation championship.

Suleiman al-Obeid [Photo: Uncertain]

He began his career with Khadamat Al-Shatea in 2007, later playing for Markaz Shabab al-Am’ari in the West Bank, and Gaza Sport. He returned to Khadamat Al-Shatea and played for the club until retirement in 2023 at the age of 39.

Al-Obeid had plans to become a football coach. Mohammad Abu Aita, a former Palestinian national player and himself a coach, told Middle East Eye, “What hurts most is that the career of such a great player came with a tragic end while he was trying to feed his children. He thought his final days would be in the national team’s training rooms, not in a blood-soaked street for a few kilos of flour.”

Despite the terrible conditions in Gaza since Israel’s invasion in October 2023, Suleiman continued to play the sport he loved. His widow Doaa told Reuters, “He used to go training every day and never stopped, not a single day. Even during the crisis of war, in the midst of rockets, shelling and mass killing, he would go play. He used to gather his friends and loved ones and go play with them.”

Israel’s genocide laid waste to the previous life the family had, with Reuters noting that their “home was destroyed in a bombardment earlier this year. They now live in a tent among the ruins of a neighbourhood of Gaza City.”

Doaa told Middle East Eye both she and Suleiman had feared for his safety and life visiting aid distribution centres for more than a month. “Suleiman began to look for aid after all of our stored food ran out. Market prices are skyrocketing and there is no cash available… My husband had to walk into death traps to feed our children…

“He described bullets whizzing past his head like rain. He was sure he would be killed there, and refused to take our eldest son, Naseem, who is 17, with him.”

Doaa added, “I begged him many times to stop going. I told him maybe we could survive without food, but not without him. 

“He refused, saying he had hungry children to feed and couldn’t bear to see them go without.”

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