NFL pro bowler sparks firestorm after wearing ‘Stop the Genocide’ eyeliner during playoff game

Al Shaair has previously worn cleats featuring political messaging, including the word “FREE” on one side, referencing the Free Palestine movement.

By Eitan Devir, Jewish Breaking News

Houston Texans linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair ignited major controversy after appearing on ESPN during Monday Night Football coverage following a playoff win while wearing eyeliner that read STOP THE GENOCIDE, a message widely viewed as a political statement tied to the ongoing war in Gaza.

The message was clearly visible in televised close-ups and quickly went viral across social media, triggering an immediate wave of applause from anti-Israel voices, who framed his statement as brave and long overdue, while critics accused him of spreading inflammatory propaganda through sports.

Al Shaair, who is Muslim, has long been a vocal anti-Israel advocate and has repeatedly used his public platform to vilify Israel.

“I feel like it’s something that’s trying to be silenced,” Al Shaair told the Houston news site Chron in 2024.

“On either side, people losing their lives is not right. In no way, shape, or form am I validating anything that happened, but to consistently say that because of Oct 7, innocent people in Gaza should now die—it’s crazy.”

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His advocacy has extended beyond interviews and into the NFL’s My Cause My Cleats program.

In December 2023, while playing for the Tennessee Titans, Al Shaair chose to support the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund, explaining his decision in an official entry tied to the campaign.

“Given the recent events in Israel and Gaza, this nonprofit provides medical aid and essential supplies to children injured and left homeless by the bombings in Gaza,” he wrote.

Al Shaair supported the same charity again in 2024 and 2025 after joining the Texans and has previously worn cleats featuring political messaging, including the word “FREE” on one side, referencing the Free Palestine movement.

On the other side of the cleats, he included a religious quote: “Surely to Allah we belong, and to him we will all return.”

The cleats also featured casualty figures tied to the war, stating, “AT LEAST 41,788 Palestinians killed; over 10,000 estimated to be under the rubble; 96,974 wounded.”

Under NFL policies players are generally restricted from displaying personal or political messages without league approval, and the league historically does not approve messages tied to political causes.

However, as of now, Al Shaair has not been reported to have been fined for his display.

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While Al Shaair has insisted he does not validate Hamas’s October 7 massacre, his public activism continues to trigger intense backlash and support as the conflict remains one of the most polarizing global issues dominating headlines and social media feeds.

The moment is now being compared to other major political flashpoints in NFL history as supporters celebrate Al Shaair’s statement as activism, while critics argue it further deepens division and turns professional sports into a stage for international propaganda wars.

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