Moroccans slumped with disappointment on Wednesday evening after their team's semi-final defeat to France, but were still pumped with pride for a World Cup run that spurred tears of joy across Africa and the Arab world.
As France's second goal went in, the deafening noise of Morocco's overwhelming support inside Qatar's Al-Bayt stadium went suddenly quiet -- a silence echoed not only in Rabat and Casablanca, but in Beirut, Cairo, Dakar and other Arab and African towns and cities.
A woman in green, sitting in the banked rows of supporters that had whistled, drummed and cheered through the game, sat silently, her hands clasped in front of her lips to watch the final minutes.
In the first World Cup held in an Arab country, and one already marked by upsets, Morocco won supporters far afield as the first Arab team to reach the quarter-finals and the first African team to reach the semis.
Long after the final whistle, when the victorious French team had left the pitch, Morocco's players stayed on, basking in the love of a stadium clad in their red and green colours.
"We are really proud of this team... we already made history so we can't judge them for this match," said Mohamad Alaoui, 24, a Moroccan student who said he had travelled from London to attend the World Cup and had been at every Morocco game.
"I'm so happy that I was here to see the team in the stadium and that I got to see them go so far in this World Cup," said Samira Idrissi, 34.
In Rabat, where fans had packed cafes for hours before the game, the crowd rose to applaud their team despite the defeat.
"This is the semi-final. It is already an honour and we are proud to see people from different countries root for the Moroccan team," said Taoufiq Ouchikh.
"We thank the national team for this achievement. We are proud of this team. We lost to a world Cup champion and we dominated," said Abdelilah Sair, another fan watching in the same cafe.
In a Beirut cafe where France fans had gathered to watch the game, Morocco fan Sanaa Kassemi burst into tears as the victorious French players celebrated, but she waved the Moroccan flag in the air.
"I have a French passport, but I am originally Moroccan. That's the most important thing about how I feel right now," she said.
On Egypt's Red Sea coast, banker Ahmed Zaki, 38, said Morocco had failed to take advantage of their chances. "They deserved to lose, but with honour", he said.
In the Cameroonian capital Yaounde, car washer Michael Fogang said he was happy despite the defeat. "I am not disappointed at all. Morocco made a lot of effort," he said in the bar where he watched the game.
French President Emmanuel Macron, who had been in the stadium for the game, led tributes to the defeated Moroccan side. 'To our Moroccan friends: Congratulations on this beautiful journey. You are making football history,' he tweeted.
France, Morocco's former colonial ruler, is home to hundreds of thousands of people of Moroccan origin, and North African flags were held aloft along the Champs Elysees in Paris after the game.
Moroccan Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch lauded a team he called heroes that brought joy to Moroccans and made the country's name 'resonate on every tongue during the World Cup'.