A Sunday Before the War, Part One
To Ajax by Steam Tram
"The opponents' supporters used to arrive at Weesperpoort
Station, an area in which a lot of Jewish street-hawkers were
working. That's why people started saying, 'We're going to the
Jews.' But the club itself did not have a Jewish culture at all
before the Second World War."
- Ajax historian Evert Vermeer
in Het Parool, October 23, 1999
You'll find this Evert Vermeer theory in almost every article
about the Jewish culture of Ajax, although usually uttered by a
different person. Former player Joop Stoffelen, for example.
The message, however, is always the same: it's a misconception
- Ajax did not have a Jewish culture.
Vermeer is right by saying that the way to Ajax led straight
through Jewish Amsterdam. Former Ajax striker and Holland
national coach Rinus Michels used to walk from Amsterdam-South
to Ajax with his dad. "Then you would pass by the Jewies!" he
says. If we would have to believe Vermeer, the Jews were gazing
at the football fans passing by on such pre-war Sundays, as if
they were thinking: weird guys, those Christians - as if
playing football was a gojse habit, just like
horse-riding or eating Christ's body.
The Dutch Jews did exercise, though. Some of them even
considered it their ideological duty. "Do not just exercise
your mind, but exercise your muscles as well", said Theodor
Herzl, the first modern Zionist. And Max Nordau encouraged the
1898 Zionistic World Congress to form a 'muscular Judaism'. He
said: "We, Jews, have a special gift for physical activity.
This may sound like a paradox, as we're used to watch ourselves
through the mirror that our enemies have been holding before us
for many generations, in which we discover numerous physical
imperfections. It is true that our muscles are weakened, and
that our opinions and attitudes do not always satisfy people.
But when Jews play games, their defects vanish, their bearing
improves, their muscles strengthen and their health gets
better."
The persecuted Jews should be assigned a country of their
own and defend it. When the next pogrom would
come, they would strike back. And so, Hakoah, the Jewish
football club of Vienna, became a European top team before the
war. In the 1920s a sort of Jewish Olympics were organized.
Albert Einstein wrote about these Maccabi Games that they
'deserved the support of all Jews, even of those who are far
away from interest in sports.'
At the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam, three out of eight
Dutch gymnasts and two out of three fancy-divers were Jewish,
among more. Nevertheless, Jewish weekly De Vrijdagavond ('The
Friday Night') thought the number of 'Jewish delegates was not
particularly big'.
The main sport of the 'muscular Judaism' was boxing. A group
of Jewish boxers beat W.A.-man Koot to death in
February 1941, which was the motive for a German razzia on the
Amsterdam square called Jonas Daniël Meijerplein. The
public fury about that razzia, in its turn, gave rise to the
violently suppressed Amsterdam February Strike. The most famous
Jewish boxer of that time was Ben Bril, who won the Dutch
boxing title before the war with a Star of David embroidered on
the right leg of his shorts. Bril, who would later refuse to
beat up a fellow Jew in the Dutch transit camp of Westerbork,
also was a - terribly bad - goalkeeper at UJS, the Jewish
Sportsclub of Utrecht. Yes, the Jews played football, too.
Jewish kids would kick some ball in the Jewish quarter, on a
square in front of the Portugese-Jewish synagogue. Down south,
at Smaragdplein, Lou de Jong (who would later become a famous
Dutch historian) was heading balls with his twin brother. There
were at least five Jewish football clubs in pre-war Amsterdam,
beautifully described by Evert de Vos in his doctoral essay
Verlies Den Moed Toch Niet ('Do Not Lose Faith').
In 1965 the Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad ('New Israelitish
Weekly') published an article about a final in 1939 between
Jewish club AED and APGS, the club of the Amsterdam police
department. Thousands of people from the Jewish quarter had
come to the ground. AED, the club of the father of 1960s and
1970s Ajax player Sjaak Swart, won the game. "People who
attended this game and the homage, later on in the club's
café at Waterlooplein, have witnessed the largest Jewish
national event in Dutch history", according to the NIW. Only
three years later, APGS players would put AED players on
deportation trains to Westerbork. AED has long been forgotten.
The only remainder of the Jewish clubs in Amsterdam, is
WV-HEDW, a fusion of three Jewish clubs, for which hardly any
Jews are playing, nowadays.
If Jews wanted to see top level football, AED was
insufficient. Before the war, every district of Amsterdam had
its own football club. People from North supported De
Volewijckers or DWS. Blauw-Wit ('Blue-White') was the team of
South and the club of the Jewish quarter and the very Jewish
area of Amsterdam-East was Ajax.
The club played at the so-called 'wooden stadium' on
Middenweg until 1934, and after that at De Meer stadium,
further down the road. There must have been a lot of Jews on
the stands. Rebbe Meyer de Hond, an artist from a poor Jewish
quarter family, whose portrait was on the walls of many Jewish
households before he died in Sobibor in 1943, complained in his
Kiekjes ('Snapshots') of 1926 that the Jews cared too much
about Ajax - and too little about the synagogue.
Of all the tens of thousands of people in the Jewish
quarter, probably only a handful were members of the club. The
Jews were even poorer than the poor Amsterdam proletariat,
whereas Ajax was a club of administrators, shop-keepers and
employees of the Nederlandsche Bank ('Dutch National Bank'). In
the first years of the 20th century a certain Mr. J. Cohen
complained in Het Groene Sportblad ('The Green Sports
Magazine'): 'A Third Division club like Ajax apparently
considers it a necessity to demand a poll-tax of ƒ4.50,
which comes, of course, on top of the contribution, to the
amount of ƒ3.50.'
Besides: a lot of children from the Jewish quarter did not
even have the time to play football on Sundays, because they
had to work in the market-stalls or shops of their fathers.
Playing football was expensive. Melhado's, a large shop on
Jodenbreestraat, often displayed a pair of football shoes right
outside the front door, which sometimes were imported all the
way from England. The children would pass by and fantasize: if
I could ever be a football player... In the 1920s, however, it
was unlikely for them to play. Even for a Jewish club. Playing
for Ajax was prohibitive: they required you to have your own
jersey and football suit-case. You had to wash your jersey on
Sunday night, right after the game, as you were not allowed to
play for Ajax with a stain on your shorts.
The Jews who could afford to become members of Ajax, were
the ones who'd made it higher up in society and moved to
wealthy parts of town, such as Watergraafsmeer and South. They
were Jews like Mozes van Praag, a diamond-worker who later
opened a piano store at the downtown square of Spui. Every
Sunday, he and his son Jaap would walk from Pretoriusstraat to
Ajax, amidst throngs of Jews. Van Praag was a donor of the club
since 1912, although Jaap later claimed he was one of Ajax'
first donors after the club was founded in 1900.
Ajax itself bathed in Jewish culture. A championship party
would take place in the theatre of Abraham Tuschinski, with
music by Max Tak. Club parties were usually held at Café
d'Ysbreeker ('The Ice-Breaker') on Weesperzijde, a meeting
point of Jewish socialists. The club-revue Ajax - Blauw Wit
('Ajax vs. Blue-White'), which was presented for the first time
on 1 January, 1918, at the Central Theatre on Amstelstraat, was
written by Leo Lauer, a Jewish journalist for the mainly Jewish
Sunday-paper Cetem. Most of its vendors at the Ajax stadium
were Jews. And the old wooden stadium was eventually demolished
by the contractors company of the De Hond brothers; Jews,
without a doubt. Their advert ('Beautiful timber, suitable for
garden-houses, hen- and dog-houses. Installation of hot water,
including conduit-pipes') is just one of many examples of the
Jewish environment within the club. You'll find it in Evert
Vermeer's book 95 Jaar Ajax ('95 Years Ajax').
'Ajax did not have any Jewish culture at all', said an
article in newspaper Het Parool on 21 October 1999, repeating
Vermeer's words. 'Ajax hardly has a Jewish background', wrote
newspaper NRC Handelsblad the day after. But in pre-war
Amsterdam-East the only organizations without a Jewish culture
were the Dutch nazi party NSB and the churches.
Egon Erwin Kirsch, a Prague based journalist, wrote at the
time: 'Amsterdam is the city of Jews and bicycles.'
Before the war, Ajax' opponents occasionally came to 'nag
the jewies'. During a gathering of the Ajax Bordjesclub
('Club Of Plates') in the early 1990s, Johnny Roeg (who played
for Ajax-1 from 1934 to 1936) told how Feyenoord captain Puck
van Heel called him a 'filthy Jew'. According to Roeg, the
referee interfered.
It's impossible to find out exactly how many of the 726 Ajax
members in the 1940-1941 season were Jewish. Luc Sacksioni, a
half-breed Jew who subscribed in 1942, is sure about Appie
Heyman, Jopie de Haan, 'the guy from the Walvisch ('Whale')
bar', Loetje Lap and Johnny Roeg ('a great player'). Today's
club officials keep saying the percentage of Jews was not
higher than with any other Amsterdam club. The city, back then,
was Jewish for at least 10%. If you would ask them what makes
them so sure about that, they would reply that there weren't
that many 'typical Jewish names' on the list of members.
In a village somewhere in the province of North-Holland, I
visit Rob van Zoest, an Ajax member since the 1960s and the
editor of Ajax' centennial book (published 2000). Van Zoest,
who starts our conversation by saying that the percentage of
Jews was not higher than with any other Amsterdam club, shows
me a complete list of members. Alright, there are only three
people called Polak on it. But if you take a closer look, you
start wondering. Meyer? Was he Jewish? And what about Meijer?
Alves Almeida?
You shouldn't count people. But if Ajax denies the Jewish
part of its history, it is mainly denying the existence of
people that got killed. Therefore, we'll try and reconstruct
one of those pre-war Ajax games.
* * *
Nowadays, the Jewish quarter is sort of an open-air museum,
packed with traffic. Most of the slum dwellings where people
lived, were literally excavated in the 'hunger winter' of
1944-1945, by Amsterdammers looking for fire-wood. Thousands
of Jews lived exactly on the spot where the integrated city
hall and opera building is, nowadays. We should feel lucky
there's still some remainders of the old Jewish quarter
anyway, as the city council wanted to demolish the entire
area after the war and construct a highway in its place.
But there are no more Jews living in the Jewish quarter. In
order to find the few surviving Jewish Ajax supporters, you
need to go to Israel, or you should bike down southward from
the Concert Hall in Old-South. If you bike southward from
Beethovenstraat, through the district of Buitenveldert, towards
Amstelveen, you'll see the remainders of Jewish Holland: an
occasional menorah on a
window-sill, a shop with a Jewish name, and sometimes even a
passer-by with an olive-tinted skin and black, curling hair.
Sixty years ago, the whole of The Netherlands had an obvious
Jewish side to it - even the smallest villages in rural
provinces such as Gelderland or Friesland.
In his appartment, a few blocks away from the Concert Hall,
87-year-old Hans Reiss shows me into his small office. There's
a computer in there, and a collection of video tapes, including
one about Ajax. A little Harvard University banner hangs from
the wall, as a trophy of pride. Reiss has done well for a man
from a bad year: born in 1912 on Sint Antoniesbreestraat, where
his father owned one of the numerous textile stores. The Hess,
Van Thijn, Horn, Bloch, Leeser and Reiss families were
'ready-made clothing Jews'.
Their shops were open on Sundays, so Christians from other
parts of town would come to the Jewish quarter. The Jewish
shop-keepers would hire pretty girls to entice the people
passing by into their stores. The merchandise was displayed on
the street, like at a bazaar. "Jodenbreestraat was as busy as
an ant-hill on those Sundays; it really was the Kalverstraat of
that time", recalls Reiss. "Those were top-days. So my father
wanted to close the shop as late as possible. He knew exactly
when the tram to Ajax would pass by. He already went to Ajax as
a kid. We were real football fans. But: passively. That
generation did not play the game itself."
In 1921, as Reiss was nine years old, his father took him
along for the first time. "The stadium was incredibly far away.
It was outside of town, in those days. But there was an
excellent connection from the Jewish quarter. The Jews would
walk to Weesperplein, or they would take tram 8, a rather
measly little tram, with no extra cars, that would cruise
through the entire Jewish quarter. A ticket was five cents: an
enormous amount in those days." Money was expensive, back then,
and the first automobiles in the Jewish quarter would not
appear until the late 1920s.
Reiss and his dad would board the tram to Weesperplein
(nick-named the 'Jewie line' by the Amsterdammers) at 1:15pm.
You could easily walk or bike the same stretch nowadays. But
back then, it was a significant distance - mentally, and
besides: people were not fit.
Tram 8 would not take you further than Weesperplein. It was
still a few kilometres to the 'wooden stadium' from there.
Reiss perceptibly revels in revealing his secret to me. He
asks: "Ever heard of the 'Gooische Moordenaar' ('Killer of Het
Gooi')?"
"Do you mean Wim Anderiesen?" I ask, referring to Ajax'
centre-half from the 1920s and 30s. He was from the area west
of Amsterdam, called Het Gooi.
"No, no, no", Reiss says, "I can now give you the missing
link. You see, Weesperplein was a terminal station. But next to
the station was this little railway yard, where you could hop
onto a little steam tram, called the Gooische Moordenaar. It
took you straight to Ajax."
The thing was officially called the Gooische Stoomtram
('Steam Tram of Het Gooi'), but anyway: father and son Reiss
would board at 1:30pm. "There was one service every 30 minutes,
so people would storm the thing. People were hanging out of the
tram from all sides. Really dangerous. Almost all of them were
Jews."
"I can't believe you can still remember all this", I
say.
Reiss: "Well, it was my childhood, wasn't it? I lived right
in the middle of it all. Until 1931. The tram would puff all
the way to Watergraafsmeer, on its way to Muiden. Right after
entering Watergraafsmeer, the tram would make a short stop, to
refill the water tank. The tram caused a lot of accidents.
That's why people nick-named it 'The Killer of Het Gooi'. I
guess there are hardly any people left to tell you this."
At 1:55pm Reiss and his father would enter the wooden
stadium on Middenweg, on the location where you'll now find the
ugly shopping mall at Christiaan Huygensplein. They sat at the
small, covered stand at the long end. On old photographs the
stadium looks like one of today's first division stadiums: if
sold-out, there were 10 to 15 thousand people there. The
ditches surrounding the stadium were covered with nets, to
catch balls shot over the stands.
Reiss says: "Why the Jews loved Ajax so much? Well, that's
very simple. Very simple indeed. It was strictly
geographical."
© Simon Kuper; all rights reserved. Reproduction,
redistribution or re-use of any kind prohibited without written
permission by the author.