As we digested the team news on our way to Celtic Park for the Premiership clash with Hearts on 7 December we all struggled to guess how Celtic would line up. Wilfried Nancy had a ‘get to know you day’ and one training session before throwing a completely new formation on the players.
This was an unnecessary and arrogant gamble. In the weeks since, the same aloofness led to the squandering of momentum in the title race and the loss of the League Cup Final. By his fourth consecutive defeat (at Dundee United), it was clear the course we were on was not about to quickly resolve and would ultimately lead to the loss of the league.
Respite came against 10-man Aberdeen and in uncomfortable fashion at Livingston, but Celtic were bossed by Motherwell, then by a Newco side who have never won so easily against Celtic. Results were not just bad, they were historically so, and notwithstanding the mess left behind after Brendan Rodgers, six defeats in eight games was down to Wilfried Nancy’s inept tactical decisions. He admitted players did not have time to learn and that the squad was not a fit for his requirements, but he persisted in some naive hope that things would magically improve.
His substitutions and tactical changes never once benefited Celtic, in stark contrast to those made by opponents during his short reign. My worry when he remained in position yesterday morning, was that we would beat Dundee United on Saturday and delay the necessary change until it was too late.
Paul Tisdale put Nancy’s name on the table but was not responsible for the appointment. By the board’s own words and deeds, they have made two successive bad managerial and one bad chief exec appointments since 2021. After so many decades of managerial excellence, that is a significant slip in standards. To quote Marvin Gaye, What’s going on?
We should all be grateful to Martin O’Neill for answering the call one more time. He will be 74-years-old in seven weeks and he is clever enough to know what a challenging environment he steps into. Far more so than the one he left last month. Success, even against Dundee United, is not guaranteed.
Transfers are hard enough in January but they need to happen as though we had a permanent manager in place. It will be difficult, try selling ‘The manager wants you but he’s leaving in May’. This is not in a good starting position.
We are now in an 18 game season with momentum against us. Hearts, Newco and Celtic all know they can take this title; the eventual winner will be required to put in an enormous effort. And you just know, the last game of the season is bound to be at Fir Park. On the positive side, if we overcome the travails of this season and win the title, they can pave over Ibrox. If anyone else cannot win the title this season, we all know they never will.
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Lennoxtown Unfiltered
Is Gerry McCulloch trying to hint here that MON is in the hidden hand society????? 4 mins 15 seconds in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EWOgyBs68k
Hmmmmm.
HH
oot.
Turkeybhoy @ 6:43 pm,
Another two, who sucked up the aerie fairy nonsense that led to Wifried Nancy.
Now not taking responsibility for being wrong and still blaming Brendan Rodgers.
You would think being Glaswegians from a certain vintage, they would have more nous.
Hail Hail
lionsroar67@5.08
Good link to today’s Training @ Lennoxtown, like yourself well impressed. Like what Shaun, Mark and Gavin, (looks more like himself there) bring in terms of spirit and encouragement. Players look sharp, there is a lot of ability out there, we just need to get the best out of it, and am confident once more we will. Good to see Tounetki back, needs to make better decisions when he creates space, and am interested to see what Jullian can bring if and when he gets a good level of fitness. Martin says we need to “supplement ” the squad, which is a good way of putting it, lot to play for through to June. Looked good today though.
Just watched the presser. Nice to have a bit of humour and a laugh, nice to hear some calmer talk about transfers, theres something about hearing MO’N talk about Celtic that gets you excited about watching the team. Must give everyone a lift at the club.
Can’t wait until the weekend now.
Pedro Lawwell has NOT gone
Spikeys
Dunno Nicholson school
Chris Mackay went St vins primary then St Ninians sec Eastwood toll,
Be suprised if he went to tĥe jesuitsÇarnwardric Csc ex member.
HH
Brilliant St Martin is back just brilliant.
My team for Saturday is
Sinisalo
Donovan, Trusty Scales and Tierney
CalMac, Hatate Nygren
Yang, Kenny and Maeda.
Martin the sly fox will be having a word with young Kenny, the lad works very hard, gets in great positions and just need a goal to get going, certain he will come good.
Also pleased to have Holm back , he gives a bit of bite, sadly lacking imo
What a lift in positivity already.
Meteorlogically speaking, every storm [-passed eventually, ours has passed, in martin I trust
kingLUBO
True leaders make other people feel better about themselves.
THE EXILED TIM on 6th January 2026 6:59 pm
Pedro Lawwell has NOT gone
True Tet,will he ever leave our heads? :-)
Hope you got over the hols all the best to you and yours in 26 at the cave.
HH
AT
Thanks,
True he never will, but he has NOT left the club, just changed positions, I posted it earlier with the relevant screen shot, last thread I believe.
And to you
Take care
HH
John Kenny????.What do people see?.I see a guy who in the past 4 weeks,when we really needed him,missed around 8 sitters,and I mean shutters.Yes he can make the odd run,but net result is zero.Not great at holding the ball up under any pressure.
I have read people on here saying the boy from Hubs,” Nah,misses too many chances”He might,but he also scores them.His overall play,far superior.Makes a nuisance of himself,roughs them up,runs all day,brings players into the game,holding off defenders,strong.
I was hoping Kenny would succeed,but too poor too often.
Shutters,WTF.What Kasper needs.
Changing the tone for a minute.
As one or two of you know, I am from Islay. I have been in Canada for 49 years, but I try to get home to Islay every year – well, since I retired.
Anyway, Islay (and other Hebridean islands) is quite different from much of the mainland. Here is an example….
Last September, while on Islay, I stopped in to the wee cafe in Ballygrant. The only business in the wee village where I grew up. There are very few people left in that area from my era. Anyway, in I went, as I do whenever I’m on the island. Got my coffee and went to sit at the only unused table.
A man (in his 30’s I’d say) was sitting with a lady at the table to my right. He was wearing a rangers cap.
As I sat down, I tapped him on the shoulder. He turned and looked at me, and said ‘what’?
Me: You can’t sit there.
Him: Why not?
Me: Because this is the Celtic end.
He burst out laughing. We talked a wee bit about football. Then he said that his brother is a Celtic supporter. He added that his father was a rangers supporter, and HIS brother supports Celtic.
I told him that this is what Gaelic Scotland is so different. I added that, when my parents were alive, their next door neighbours’ washing line often had 4 football tops. Celtic home and away, and rangers home and away. Two brothers. One supported Celtic, the other supported rangers.
The man burst out laughing. ‘These are my nephews’, he said.
We went our separate ways.
Life doesn’t have to be a pain in the arse.
Weeron.
Surprised that Pedro is still involved after he and his family in fear for their lives.The horrendous daily attacks,amazing how posters stuck to a lampost can terrify people.Never knew that.Anyway,after running Celtic fans into the ground supplying his pet hack with tales of terror,he seems to have recovered.
Like to wish him well,but won’t.
Weeron 😊
Chairbhoy from earlier
Brendan resigned by “tendering his resignation” .
He was contracted to June 2026. He didn’t work the remainder of his contract.
He resigned summarily.
Get over it.
Weeron,
Well I neffer.Ochone Ochone.
Hello.Hello,this is the Utter Hebrides calling,Civilisashun.
Angus Og,CSC.
TBB,
Is that like being,” Summarily “executed?
The things Ii learn on here.I must have slept through Uni.
That cnt Fernandez will be top scorer at this rate
Dumpling too, but big
Aberdeen player 1 on 1 heavy touch they escape.
Think that the 9th goal they have scored from a corner.Showed that chart on Saturday,got down to 3,still no sign of us.We are woeful from every type of set piece.It was throw insJ on Saturday,but we watched that farce play out so often.
Do none of our staff watch Arsenal,etc.If they are clueless,watch how other teams do it.So many goals now fromm set pieces,long throws,but not from us.Amazing that Scales could do it for Ireland,but nowhere near for us.
From videocelts , there was a discussion about this before:
Peter Lawwell has now resigned from both Celtic PLC and Celtic Football and Athletic Company.
huns 2 up but ffs they and sheep seriously pish!
Fourstonecoppi
Not buying it -so pish they beat us
We must win on Saturday now.To be honest,Dundee U game should have been 4 at half time.By the end should have been,7-2.Murdered them,but,hunners and hunners of sitters missed.So I think a decent win.
Thelin has given the Dons a shambles of a squad with empty shirts and nonentities all over the park.
Nisbet a prime example – and to think some were howling for us to sign him back in the day.
How TF did we lose a cup final to thems under BR ??
The huns are organised and in Chermiti and Fernandez are a set piece threat.
The nyaff Raskin is also good with headed goals from set pieces.
We need bodies in if we’re to mount a title challenge.
Gene,
You think they SHOULD have beat us?I am watching their game,and as the guy says,Dons are dire.Did not have much hope for this game,but the weekend game at Pittodrie might be different.New guy in charge for Dons tonight.
Turkeybhoy
What ifs don’t count
MON even mentioned the huns getting a phycological boost by beating us ….seen it all before..
Martin is a smart cookie who sometimes comes across as rambling a bit but he knows exactly what he’s saying .
Martin mark 1 ‘Rangers are the benchmark’ .
I honestly think the Timternet right now is full of entrenched views particularly around Rogers.
I, personally can’t stand him and think/know that he twice tried to burn the house down on his way out.
There is absolutely no point in anyone arguing about him.
I will never change my mind.
Guys like BSR and Chairbhoy won’t ever change their mind.
We ALL need to push the club/team on to victory.
Adam Idahs agent just bought a £1m house in DubaiCSC.
Gene on 6th January 2026 8:47 pm
Fourstonecoppi
Not buying it -so pish they beat us
We should’ve been outta sight in the 1st half
glendalystonsils on 6th January 2026 9:26 pm
Martin is a smart cookie who sometimes comes across as rambling a bit but he knows exactly what he’s saying . Martin mark 1 ‘Rangers are the benchmark’ .
* I believe he told the players that he would never lie to them but followed that with the above noted statement to the smsm, bamy 8 said allegedly said that in the tunnel before the 6-2 game he figured they would lose as our players were jumping up and down, hammering at the walls and ceiling and chomping at the bit so fired up had he got them.
https://www.andymuirhead.com/p/the-chasm-at-celtic-fc-how-a-football
The Chasm at Celtic FC: How a Football Institution became divided on Israel & Palestine
Board-backed historic Zionist ties versus fan-led Palestinian solidarity: how two irreconcilable politics collide at Celtic Football Club.
Andy Muirhead
Jan 06, 2026
Celtic Football Club stands as a profound historical contradiction. A club built on the values of Irish anti-colonialism, Catholic charity, and social justice, home to one of Europe’s most vocal pro-Palestinian fan bases. Yet simultaneously, the Celtic board tried to suppress Palestinian flag displays, ban supporters groups, and invoke accusations of antisemitism to silence pro-Palestinian supporters on the terraces.
However, this fracture reflects a deeper history, as Celtic’s leadership has continued to harbour ties to Zionist movements and organisations, while the club’s supporters, stepped in Irish republicanism and anti-colonialism, have stood in support of Palestinians. The result is a cultural and political chasm that has only widened since 2023 – beyond the footballing fractures in place.
How Zionism Infiltrated Celtic
The infiltration of Zionist influence into Celtic began far earlier than most supporters realise. In 1932, at the height of the Depression and a decade before the founding of the state of Israel, two Celtic players (Peter McGonagle and Charles Geatons) attended a football charity lecture hosted by the Glasgow Jewish Institute. The lecture was delivered by Tom Maley, brother of Willie Maley, who had managed Celtic from 1897 to 1940 and was intimately connected to the club’s founding principles.
Willie Maley himself would, a decade later in 1943, host a Save the Children fundraiser at his restaurant, The Bank, on Queen Street. Maley claimed to have heard about the appeal “through some of his Jewish friends.” But the appeal was explicitly Zionist in character: the Glasgow Women’s Appeal Committee, which organised it, openly stated its goal was to rescue “youngsters from the darkness of Europe and giving them a fresh start in Erez Yisrael”- recruiting settler colonists for Palestine.
Among the donors to Maley’s fundraiser were members of the Sellyn, Barnett, and Goldberg families – the Caledonian Cousinhood: an elite network of Zionist families representing approximately 10% of Scotland’s Jewish population and exercising disproportionate influence over political and institutional affairs, including football.
Celtic’s founding-era leadership was already embedded in networks that explicitly promoted Zionist colonisation of Palestine more than fifteen years before 1948. This was not incidental contact, it was ideological alignment orchestrated through charity and social connection.
The Glasgow Jewish Institute and Irgun Connections
In 1947, British intelligence had become deeply concerned about the Glasgow Jewish Institute. Declassified MI5 files from the National Archives reveal that the Institute was identified as a meeting place for an Irgun terrorist cell [the Irgun being one of three Jewish terrorist organisations that would later merge to form the Israeli Defence Forces]. MI5 reported that members of the Institute were “increasingly bitter and resentful on the Palestine question” and warned of them “losing their patience and their tempers shortly unless some decision satisfactory to themselves is arrived at fairly soon.”
Yet, Celtic’s hierarchy chose to engage with the Institute and with Zionist networks. In 1957, Celtic attended a Glasgow Jewish Institute dinner and dance with the Israeli football club Hapoel Tel Aviv. Among those attending were Maurice Benzion Links, then-Chairman of the Glasgow Commission of the Jewish National Fund, and Leslie Diamond, President of the Glasgow Jewish Representative Council. Representing Celtic were Chairman Robert Kelly, manager James McGrory, and several players. The match that followed was billed as a charity game, though the beneficiary remains unclear to this day.
What is clear is that the club’s leadership, Kelly and McGrory, had established direct contact with Zionist organisational structures in Glasgow.
How Celtic Fronted a JNF Fundraiser
The most explicit evidence of Celtic’s hierarchy backing for Zionist fundraising comes from the 1962 Celtic vs. Real Madrid match, labelled the “Blue and White Trophy Challenge Match.”
The architect was Max Benjamin, a Glasgow businessman, tailor, bookmaker, and self-described Zionist who held the position of Entertainments Officer for the Glasgow Blue and White Committee of the Jewish National Fund. Benjamin initially sought to organise a JNF fundraiser between Celtic and Eintracht Frankfurt, but faced opposition from Glasgow’s Jewish community, which objected to hosting a German team so soon after World War II. Undeterred, Benjamin pivoted. Working with Glasgow Evening News football correspondent Gair Henderson, Benjamin eventually signed up European giants Real Madrid to come to Glasgow.
On 10 September 1962, the match took place at Celtic Park. It was not a minor fundraiser; it was a high-profile, club-sanctioned event. The match raised £11,000 explicitly for the JNF, described in fundraising materials as going toward “the rehabilitation of refugee women and children from Europe and North Africa” – coded language for the JNF’s land acquisition and Jewish settlement projects in Palestine.
The match programme itself reveals the full extent of institutional participation. Key sponsors included:
A. Goldberg and Sons Limited, the flagship Goldberg family firm that ran iconic Scottish department stores. The Goldbergs had supported Willie Maley’s 1943 Zionist fundraiser and would go on to place at least five family members as trustees of the Glasgow Jewish Community Trust (GJCT) founded in 1963, a year after the Real Madrid charity match.
Sellyn’s Menswear, run by the Sellyn family. Larry Sellyn remained a GJCT trustee as recently as April 2024. His nephew, David Sellyn, is described as a “patron of Celtic” today, maintaining the family’s institutional connection.
Lex Motors, run by Rosser Chinn of London, who was President of the Jewish National Fund in London at the time. In 1963, Chinn was honoured at a London dinner in connection with planting a forest in Israel bearing his name. He would later become the father of Trevor Chinn, who is effectively the leader of the British Zionist movement today and lobbying for Zionist interests.
Max Benjamin himself addressed the attendees as Convenor of the game, welcoming the team (managed by McGrory) and paying homage to “Chairman Robert Kelly and the Celtic Board for their role in organising a game which he hoped would go down in the annals of Scottish football.” Benjamin explicitly crediting the Celtic board for their participation in fronting a Zionist fundraiser.
This is not allegation or inference. It is documented in match programmes and contemporary newspaper accounts. Celtic, as an institution, lent its name, stadium, and legitimacy to raising money for the Jewish National Fund’s colonial/settler projects in Palestine.
Celtic
Institutional Overlap and the Caledonian Cousinhood
The 1962 match was merely the beginning of a structural relationship. What makes this relationship durable and ongoing is the existence of individuals who straddle both worlds: Zionist organisations and Celtic Football Club.
The clearest contemporary example is Charles Barnett.
Barnett served as Treasurer of JNF KKL Scotland (Glasgow Commission of the Jewish National Fund) for decades, a role he held into at least the 2020s. He appears in committee photos, fundraising events, and JNF-linked activities across that entire period. Professionally, he was a partner and leading sports accountant at PKF (later BDO) in Glasgow.
At Celtic, Barnett’s roles included:
Lead external auditor of Celtic via PKF/BDO from approximately 1994 to 2013, meaning he personally signed off the club’s audited accounts for nearly two decades.
Key fundraiser and organiser for Celtic Charity Fund/Celtic FC Foundation events, appearing at and sometimes fronting high-profile dinners and golf days.
Treasurer of the SPFL Trust (Scottish Professional Football League’s charitable arm) since 2016, maintaining influence over Scottish football governance.
Barnett is simultaneously embedded in three institutional poles: the Zionist infrastructure (JNF), Celtic’s financial and fundraising apparatus, and Scottish football governance. His participation in “Scotland v Israel” events organised by JNF KKL Scotland, which leverage Scottish football relationships to raise money, illustrates how individuals create operational continuity between these worlds.
The Next Generation
Max Benjamin’s daughter, Maryon Benn, inherited both his Zionist ideology and his Celtic connections. A prominent figure in the Scottish Women’s International Zionist Organisation and Jewish Care Scotland, Benn became Business Development and Marketing Manager of Scotland’s first privately built hospital, the Bon Secours.
The Bon Secours, located in Glasgow’s Langside district (where many Cousinhood members lived), was run by Catholic nuns but was said to be “a favourite with the Jewish community.” It was funded by Cousinhood millionaires including the hard-line Zionist Isidore Walton and his son David, as repayment for “the many family kindnesses” the hospital had given them.
More significantly for this narrative, the Bon Secours became “a familiar port of call for footballers and other sporting personalities.” Celtic players Henrik Larsson, Stéphane Mahé, and Alan Stubbs were all treated there during their playing days with the Parkhead side. Benn was actively marketing the Bon Secours to Celtic through advertisements in The Celtic View, the club’s official newspaper, as late as 1998.
This illustrates how the relationship was sustained: through multiple channels of personal, commercial, and charitable connection, individuals with explicit Zionist commitments maintained presence within Celtic’s ecosystem.
The Contemporary Split
From the 1960s through the early 2010s, the relationship between Celtic’s hierarchy and Zionist networks remained largely invisible and uncontested by the support. Two factors changed this: the rise of social media and digital organising, and the radicalisation of Palestinian solidarity among a younger generation of supporters, with the watershed moment happeningin 2016, during a Champions League qualifier against Israeli side Hapoel Be’er Sheva.
Match the Fine for Palestine and the Birth of Aida Celtic
On 17 August 2016, Green Brigade members and supporters throughout Celtic Park flew the Palestinian flag during the match against Hapoel Be’er Sheva to show solidarity with the plight of the Palestinian people. UEFA subsequently charged Celtic for displaying an “illicit banner.” The fine was eventually set at £8,600.
What happened next was unprecedented as the Celtic ultras group mobilised a crowdfunding campaign called #MatchTheFinefoPalestine to raise money for Palestinian charities. The campaign raised £176,076 more than twenty times the UEFA fine imposed on the club.
But the fundraising served a larger purpose. The Green Brigade and supporters worked with the Lajee Centre, a cultural centre in the Aida refugee camp near Bethlehem, to establish Aida Celtic FC a youth football academy bearing Celtic’s name. To sustain the project, supporters produced and sold Aida Celtic football shirts, many designed in collaboration with high-profile supporters, including the Scottish band Primal Scream and football legend Eric Cantona.
Aida Celtic FC became more than a fundraising project; it became a symbol of institutional solidarity between Celtic’s supporters and Palestinian resistance. Every fundraiser for Aida, every display of the Palestinian flag at Celtic Park, and every campaign donation represented a direct transfer of resources and solidarity to Palestine, not from Celtic FC as a club, but from Celtic’s supporters as an organised, politically conscious collective.
Celtic’s board, meanwhile, faced UEFA fines and sanctions. The club’s initial response was to demand fans not to unfurl banners or flags on match days. But their responses soon escalated.
0
The Board Cracks Down
The escalation of fighting in Israel and Palestine in October 2023 brought matters to a head. On 7 October, Hamas launched coordinated attacks on Israel; before Israel retaliated with a devastating assault on Gaza. Within days, social media platforms, universities, and sporting venues became flashpoints for Israel-Palestine solidarity activism.
At Celtic Park, supporters organised to display Palestinian flags and banners during the club’s Champions League match against Atlético Madrid on 25 October 2023. The Green Brigade announced their intention to fly the flag for Palestine.
The Celtic board’s response was categorical. On 24 October, the club issued a statement: “Celtic Park is where we come to support our football club. Recognising this, respecting the gravity of the tragedy unfolding and its impact on communities in Scotland and across the world, and in line with other clubs, leagues and associations, we ask that banners, flags and symbols relating to the conflict and those countries involved in it are not displayed at Celtic Park at this time.”
The statement also added: “Celtic is a football club and not a political organisation. One of our core values from inception is to be open to all regardless of race, colour, politics or creed. That is why the club has always made clear that political messages and banners are not welcome at Celtic Park.”
This was a remarkably convenient use of “political neutrality,” given that Celtic players wore black armbands as a “show of respect” for all those affected by the conflict. The club’s hierarchy had sanctioned fundraising events for the JNF, a manifestly political Zionist organisation, for decades. The club also never objected to Ukrainian flags and support during the Russia-Ukraine war.
The Green Brigade proceeded anyway. Supporters distributed thousands of Palestinian flags outside the stadium and displayed them throughout the match. Celtic Park became a sea of Palestinian symbols.
UEFA investigated. Celtic was fined. The club then took further steps when the Green Brigade was banned from attending away matches and faced extended sanctions for repeated Palestine flag displays. To supporters, this felt like the club was choosing to discipline Palestinian solidarity more aggressively than it disciplined pro-Israel expression.
The Board’s Defense: Accusations of Antisemitism
When supporters continued to push back against what they perceived as selective enforcement and pro-Zionist bias, then chairman Iain Bankier deployed a potent rhetorical weapon, peddling unfounded lies and accusations of antisemitism.
In 2012–2013, Lord Ian Livingston, a Conservative peer and former BT CEO, joined the Celtic board as a non-executive director. Livingston’s parliamentary record was unambiguously pro-Israel and pro-austerity. When supporters at an Annual General Meeting objected to Livingston’s presence, framing their criticism around his voting record on welfare cuts and his stated support for Israeli government positions, Bankier responded by accusing sections of the support of “antisemitism.”
This move was profound. By equating political criticism of Livingston’s record with antisemitism, Bankier created a rhetorical barrier against discussing the board’s Israel-Palestine politics. Critics were silenced not through reasoned counter-argument but through the threat of being labelled antisemitic. Celtic’s hierarchy simply followed the Zionist playbook of weaponising antisemitism accusations to protect pro-Israel board members from accountability.
Livingston ultimately stepped down, but the precedent was set. Any challenge to the board’s relationship to anything related to Israel, and you would face accusations of prejudice.
Two Celtics
A 2025 investigative article by Jill Thomson and David Miller, published on UK Column and Tracking Power, provides the most comprehensive public accounting of Celtic’s Zionist connections.
What Thomson and Miller have established is that Celtic’s leadership in the 1930s to 1960s actively participated in Zionist fundraising. Elite Zionist families in Scotland maintained institutional influence at Celtic. The 1962 Real Madrid match was explicitly organised as a JNF fundraiser for settler communities.
Individuals like Max Benjamin and Charles Barnett maintained simultaneous roles in JNF and Celtic structures. These are documented facts visible in contemporary newspapers, match programmes, and official records.
The article’s significance lies in assembling these facts into a coherent historical narrative that had previously been fragmented or overlooked within Celtic’s long and storied history.
While none of the current Celtic hierarchy hold formal office in JNF, the Board of Deputies, or publicly support Zionist organisations. The direct institutional overlap evident in earlier eras appears to have become less visible, whether because it has diminished or have been well hidden it is clear that the behaviour of the board in recent years over its suppression of Palestine solidarity, its accusations of antisemitism against supporters, its differential treatment of pro-Israel vs. pro-Palestine expression suggests continuity in political orientation even if board ties are less public.
Meanwhile, Celtic’s supporters have emerged as one of Europe’s most consistently and materially pro-Palestinian fan bases. While the club hierarchy adopts a posture of “political neutrality” that in practice favours suppressing Palestinian expression, the supporters have mobilised Celtic’s identity and fan resources to materially aid Palestinian communities.
The chasm at Celtic Park in relation to Israel & Palestine is not primarily about individual board members’ personal beliefs. It reflects the legacy of Celtic’s leadership. It was embedded in networks and institutions that promoted Zionist colonisation of Palestine.
While Celtic’s supporters, influenced by Irish republicanism, see Palestinians as experiencing a struggle similar to Ireland’s fight against British rule and colonialism. By continuing to fly Palestinian flags, raising funds for Aida, and defying bans, Celtic supporters and the Green Brigade are representing what they believe to be the true values of Celtic. They see the board’s actions as a betrayal.
Celtic Football Club now contains two distinct institutions within itself.
The first is the board and executive: a corporate entity concerned with broadcasting rights, sponsorships, UEFA compliance, and the avoidance of controversy. This Celtic has historical ties to Zionist networks and currently adopts policies that suppress Palestinian expression while claiming political neutrality. It views supporters’ activism as a liability.
The second is the supporters, especially organised groups like the Green Brigade, a political and cultural community that sees Celtic as a vehicle for solidarity with the oppressed. This Celtic flies Palestinian flags despite fines, raises six-figure sums for refugee camps, and views Palestine as a continuation of the anti-colonial struggle that Celtic was built on. It sees the board’s suppression as collusion with the oppressors and the genocide they are committing.
These two Celtics are now in open conflict – not just from a football point of view. The board has banned, fined, and disciplined supporters for expressing solidarity with Palestine. Supporters have defied bans, continued fundraising, and issued statements accusing the board of hypocrisy and betrayal.
What remains to be determined is whether Celtic’s supporters, through sustained and disciplined activism, can reclaim their club from a compromised hierarchy or whether the board’s authority, backed by UEFA rules and corporate interests, will succeed in silencing Palestinian solidarity within the terraces at Celtic Park once and for all.
Ultimately it could shape the future of football as a site of political expression and solidarity in an era of deepening global injustice
HH
An Tear
I stand corrected.
Maybe the guy who told me was mixed up with the other guy MOM was on about.
Apols for being totally wrong.
Tontine Tim on 6th January 2026 9:34 pm
Martin is probably the best psychological coach we’ve had since Jock Stein.