The Jewish Chronicle

For some it is abuse, for others identity

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team for the Jewish émigrés, the intellectu­als attracted by the splendour of the ground and the team’s dominance under Herbert Chapman.

Spurs were by far the most popular team within the community at the time. The JC confidentl­y stated that in the 1920s almost all Jews who followed the game were Spurs supporters and the Jewish fanbase continued to grow in the 1930s. A reporter from the

Daily Express writing in 1934 said he was surrounded by Jewish fans on the ter- race. The following year, several papers quoted a figure of as many as 10,000 Jews in the crowd, a third of the total.

These figures became newsworthy in December 1935 when White Hart Lane was chosen by the FA as the venue for an internatio­nal between England and Germany. Playing at Tottenham was seen at the time as an affront to the Jewish community, demonstrat­ing that in the mid-1930s Spurs were widely perceived as a club with a large Jewish support. Opposition was organised. “The Jews have been the best supporters of the Tottenham club ever since its formation, and we shall adopt every means in our power to stop the match,” one of the protest organisers told the Star, London’s paper. “We regard the visit of the German team as an effrontery, not only to the Jewish race but to all lovers of freedom.”

4 December 1935 was the day the swastika flew over White Hart Lane. The German team gave a wincingly sinister Nazi salute to the crowd before kick-off but England did not. The flag didn’t last too long — a fan climbed onto the roof of the West Stand and pulled it down. Neither did German notions of superiorit­y – they lost 3-0.

The following year, the British Union of Fascists led by Oswald Mosley used the Tottenham crowd to attack the “Jewish sporting mentality” which was at odds with the upstanding principles of the “Nordic race”. They alleged that a supposed increase in barracking on the terraces emanated from Jewish supporters unable to comprehend the decency and fair play that characteri­sed British sportsmans­hip.

The club was reluctant to reciprocat­e this dedication that spanned generation­s. Mickey Dulin played for Spurs in the late 1940s and kept quiet about his heritage. “They didn’t know I was Jewish, Turkish or Greek, we didn’t talk about it. We all just kept schtum,” he says. Spurs ‘superfan’, businessma­n Morris Keston, was given five shares in the pre-plc days but the club refused to register him. “People used to say to me: ‘They [the board] don’t like you because you’re Jewish.’ They didn’t want any outsiders,” he told Anthony Clavane. Another writer, Mihir Bose, says that before Irving Scholar took over in the early 1980s there was “unofficial apartheid” between Jewish supporters and gentile directors.

Arsenal, on the other hand, openly acknowledg­ed the connection. In the mid-1960s for example their pro- gramme wished supporters well over Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar. Spurs did not follow suit until 1973. When Chapman died in 1934 his JC obituary praised him as a ‘friend of the Jewish people’.

Despite the club’s attitude, Jewish Spurs fans continued to feel they belonged in the stands and on the terraces at White Hart Lane. Changing patterns of class and affluence meant that by the 1960s, the local community had shrunk considerab­ly but family allegiance remained strong in the large Jewish communitie­s in north London and south Essex. Many moved from terrace to the seats but they still felt safe and secure.

Jewishness then became more inextricab­ly intertwine­d with the identity of being a Spurs fan as Tottenham became the ‘Yids’, an aspect of supporter identity that persists to this day and remains intensely controvers­ial.

At some point from the late 1960s onwards, opposition fans began to chant abuse at Spurs supporters using the word. Most Jewish supporters of that era are convinced they know when it began but probably are recounting the first time they heard it. One told us with certainty that it was started by Charlton fans in the early 1960s. Another saw Spurs win the 1967 FA Cup Final from the Chelsea end and was appalled by the anti-Semitic abuse.

Others blame the popular 1960s and 1970s sitcom Til Death Do Us Part and its central character, the bigoted West Ham-supporting Alf Garnett, played with gusto by Spurs season ticket holder Warren Mitchell, who referred to Spurs supporters as Yids. However, it’s more likely this came from writer Johnny Speight’s sharp ear for the East End vernacular.

Through the 1970s abuse from opposition fans referring to Spurs fans as Jews was commonplac­e, especially when going away. The chant “does your rabbi know you’re here?” was mild and amusing compared with the rest. “I’ve never felt more like gassing the Jews…”, “one man went to gas, went to gas a yiddo…”, “Spurs are on their way

to Auschwitz, Hitler’s gonna gas ’em again”, Nazi salutes and, perhaps most insidious of all, the hiss of escaping gas. Supporters of Tottenham Hotspur, Jew and gentile alike, have heard it all. And to the authors’ knowledge it has never been directed at Arsenal fans.

In response, something remarkable happened. Instead of repudiatin­g the long history of Jewish support and the Jews who stood amongst them, fans embraced it. In response to the abuse, fans danced up and down on the terraces singing “We are the yids, we are the yids, we are we are we are the yids!”, appropriat­ing a chant “We are the Mods!” from an existing subculture and providing yet another example of the swirling soup that is Lon- don culture. Supporters wore skullcaps to games. The Israeli flag flew from the terraces. The Star of David was incorporat­ed into home-made banners or the decorated white butchers’ coats that were popular at the time.

Using the word as a term of endearment and comradeshi­p nullified the negativity before the words left the mouths of abusers. Context is key to meaning: Spurs fans do not use the word in a derogatory way. They refuse to be demeaned or controlled by the abuse.

It would have been easy, in the face of the abuse, to blame the Jews — after all people have for the last 3,000 years — and turn on them. Instead, the response was acceptance, as it always has been on the White Hart Lane terraces. Tottenham resist- ed the casual racism endemic in 1970s football. During the many troughs in our fortunes over the last 35 years, there have been few hints of antisemiti­c feeling towards any of the three Jewish owners. The thread of a heritage of independen­ce and inclusivit­y runs through the fabric of support to this day. To label this awareness of the process of discrimina­tion as political consciousn­ess would be to overstate the case, but supporters are conscious of the process of discrimina­tion and they refuse to accept it. While the term has been in regular currency for decades, over the past ten years it has been used more readily in chants and in social media to define loyalty, continuity and heritage, perhaps in part because Spurs supporters have become more conscious than ever before of their history and identity in response to outside forces such as the consistent success of rivals Chelsea and Arsenal. What makes Spurs fans unique has become extremely important in an homogenise­d, money-dominated Premier League and many choose to express this through using the word Yid about themselves and their team.

It has become so embedded, the recent re-igniting of the debate about the word showed that many younger supporters had no idea about the origins, it was just part of being a Spur. Yet the term remains the subject of intense, sometimes bitter controvers­y.

Mark Damazer, born and brought up in a north London Jewish family and a supporter since 1961, explains the case against the word from within the community: “I first came across the chant in the mid-1990s. I was with my two small children. I thought the crowd was shouting ‘yeast’. I asked a neighbour and was shocked when he told me. I am still shocked when I hear it.

“Well-meaning non-Jewish Tottenham fans may think of it as a defence mechanism to employ against antisemite­s among opposing supporters. But this is a word that for centuries has not merely been used to convey ignorance, suspicion and prejudice. It has also been a way of identifyin­g people who subsequent­ly were marked out for servitude and death.”

This view, that context is rendered insignific­ant compared with the prejudice and abuse intrinsic to the word, is supported not only by representa­tives of Jewish organisati­ons but also by a substantia­l number of Jewish Spurs supporters, who tolerate its use rather than embrace it. One of the authors of this is Jewish and wholeheart­edly defends its use by Spurs supporters while at the same time never using it to describe himself or other fans, because deep down it does not feel right.

The most voluble critic of Spurs supporters’ use of the word from outside the club is David Baddiel, the Jewish comedian and author. His view is that Tottenham fans should stop using the word completely. The tribalism that bedevils contempora­ry fandom means many reject his arguments purely on the basis that he is a Chelsea fan. In fact, his campaign began when he admonished Chelsea fans chanting anti-Semitic abuse in a match against Spurs.

In a widely circulated short film and subsequent discussion­s around the subject, Baddiel not only says the word has no place in football grounds or anywhere else for that matter, he also contradict­s the process of reclamatio­n, saying that as nonJews, Spurs fans have no right to the word in the first place.

While Baddiel’s viewpoint is a serious attempt to address the complexiti­es of reappropri­ation of language, he ends up in the contorted position of requiring Spurs fans to stop, regardless apparently of anything sung or done by the opposition, thus denying the context of decades of abuse and implying that rival fans are justified in their use of Yid for as long as Spurs fans use the word. His argument sounds suspicious­ly as if it is their own fault.

That contorted logic emerged in a different and surprising context in 2013 when the debate went national, involving the police, the FA and the then Prime Minister, David Cameron.

When in early September 2013 he pronounced his verdict on the longrunnin­g debate, his intended audience was those involved in the free speech debate. Yet he struck a chord with the majority of Spurs fans. “There’s a differ-

ence between Spurs fans self-describing themselves as Yids and someone calling someone a Yid as an insult,” he said. “You have to be motivated by hate. Hate speech should be prosecuted – but only when it’s motivated by hate.”

No doubt sensitive to issues around discrimina­tory and abusive language in the light of other cases such as the prosecutio­n of England captain John Terry for alleged racist language, the FA took it upon themselves to address what it termed the Y word debate. The organisati­on outlined both sides of the argument and, significan­tly, reached a conclusion: “The FA considers that the use of the term ‘yid’ is likely to be considered offensive by the reasonable observer.”

Having acknowledg­ed the complexity of the debate, the FA reached the conclusion that “rules on acceptable behaviour and language need to be simple, understand­able and applicable to all people at all levels of the game”.

This definition was endorsed by the Metropolit­an Police, who declared before the home match against West Ham in September 2013 that all fans who use the word, including Tottenham supporters, could be committing an offence under section 5 of the Public Order Act. A year previously, the Met had stated that fans would not face prosecutio­n in these circumstan­ces because there was “no deliberate intention to cause offence”.

Context had been removed. There was now no apparent distinctio­n between opposing fans giving Nazi salutes and singing about gassing the Jews, and Spurs supporters getting behind their team. And the argument had moved from one about prejudice to one about offence, a much broad- er and very different debate and one which raised uncomforta­ble questions about the limits of free speech.

At the game against West Ham, songs about Hitler and gas chambers were clearly audible from the away section. Nazi salutes were also seen. A fan was arrested, a supporter of Tottenham Hotspur who had used the word Yid in a chant. In the following weeks, two more Spurs fans were arrested for racially aggravated public order offences. Unusually, their names were released by the police. Publicly named as racists, the fans had bail conditions imposed that did not allow them within 2,500 yards of any stadium where Spurs were playing from four hours before until four hours after a game. The club banned the fans from its ground and withdrew their membership­s and season tickets. The presumptio­n of innocence until proof of guilt had apparently been cast aside.

After months in which the three fans remained publicly labelled as racists and during which time the case was repeatedly postponed, the Crown Prosecutio­n Service announced that the charges were to be dropped because there was “insufficie­nt evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction”. The club rescinded its ban, reinstated membership­s and refunded money for games missed.

The fans had been backed throughout by the Tottenham Hotspur Sup- porters’ Trust, the membership of which had itself debated whether or not to back the fans. The Trust put the fans in touch with a legal team which, once the case was dropped, issued a strongly worded statement criticisin­g a “misguided and over-zealous approach by the Crown Prosecutio­n Service and the Metropolit­an Police”. The defence team went on to support the refusal to concede the word yid to the fascists and bigots, and concluded: “Any organisati­on or individual that sets out to brand Spurs fans’ use of the word Yid as being racist runs a high risk of being perceived as pursuing other self-serving agendas. We urge them to focus their attention on those who are clearly using threatenin­g or abusive words or behaviour towards others based on hostility or hate towards others’ race or religion.”

Ironically, this episode popularise­d the use of the word Yid among Spurs fans after a period when use of the word seemed to be falling away. It cemented it as an expression of pride in being a Spurs fan, and in so doing removed it still further from its original roots. Something that could be seen as the ultimate irony.

What the whole episode did was underline once more the complex identity of the Spurs crowd, the network of references and experience­s that are woven together to create identity. It is arguably one of the most complex cultural constructs in football, quite some achievemen­t in the world of football fandom where the appetite for and imaginatio­n deployed creating cultural realities is particular­ly strong.

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES (3) ?? Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper Pat Jennings punches the ball away from the goal and clear of Leeds United player Jack Charlton in 1969
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES (3) Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper Pat Jennings punches the ball away from the goal and clear of Leeds United player Jack Charlton in 1969
 ??  ?? The infamous game in 1935 when the German team gave the Nazi salute
The infamous game in 1935 when the German team gave the Nazi salute
 ??  ?? The crowd in 1912 for a game against Clapton Orient
The crowd in 1912 for a game against Clapton Orient
 ??  ?? Spurs fans at the opening game of the 2016/17 season
Spurs fans at the opening game of the 2016/17 season
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left)
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 ??  ?? Super fan Morris Keston ( and Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman ( right)
Super fan Morris Keston ( and Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman ( right)
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PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES (5)
 ??  ?? Lord Sugar, Daniel Levy and Irving Scholar
Lord Sugar, Daniel Levy and Irving Scholar
 ??  ?? ‘A People’s History Of Tottenham Hotspur Football Club: How Spurs Fans Shaped the Identity of One of the World’s Most Famous Clubs’ by Martin Cloake and Alan Fisher is published by Pitch Publishing at £17.99
‘A People’s History Of Tottenham Hotspur Football Club: How Spurs Fans Shaped the Identity of One of the World’s Most Famous Clubs’ by Martin Cloake and Alan Fisher is published by Pitch Publishing at £17.99
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