The Jewish Chronicle

SPURS ‘YID’ ROW ERUPTS AGAIN

WJC, CST and JLC call on Tottenham to crack down as Jewish supporters say their use of the word is not racist

- BY BEN WEICH

RENEWED CALLS for Tottenham Hotspur fans to renounce the word “Yid” were met with scepticism this week ahead of the club’s match against Chelsea, whose fans have repeatedly used the term in a pejorative way.

The World Jewish Congress (WJC), Board of Deputies, Community Security Trust (CST) and the Jewish Leadership Council (JLC) have all called on the club to clamp down on fans using the word to describe themselves in match chants.

Chelsea fans have been involved in a series of incidents relating to alleged antisemiti­c chanting — primarily directed towards Tottenham Hotspur — which has a long associatio­n with Jewish communitie­s in North London.

The club itself says it has a “zero-tol- erance position” regarding antisemiti­sm, but insisted that fans’ use of that word has never been “intended to cause offence”.

It added that a re-assessment of the use of “Yid” can only take place “within the context of a total clampdown on unacceptab­le antisemiti­sm”.

Three males were arrested on suspicion of antisemiti­sm-related offences at Tuesday’s tie between the two sides at Wembley. Two were released with no further action taken; the other was released under investigat­ion.

Mike Leigh, one of the hosts of the popular Spurs Show podcast, explained that the use of the term “Yid” by Tottenham fans originated in a desire to reclaim it from rival fans — most notably Chelsea and West Ham supporters — who used it in a derogatory sense.

Mr Leigh, who is Jewish, told the JC: “That’s when the fans started saying, ‘Well, if you’re going to call us ‘effing yids’, then we are the Yids’.

“Knowing that context is important. It’s a very nuanced topic — it’s not black and white. It is antisemiti­c to chant it in a certain way, if it’s done to cause offence or hurt.

“But, from my perspectiv­e, there is a difference in the way the term is used by different sets of supporters, and I think most Spurs fans will share this view.”

Labour peer and Tottenham supporter Lord Mendelsohn rubbished the “pointless and thoughtles­s campaign” to clamp down on Spurs fans using the word, calling for authoritie­s to “address the significan­t challenges of our time, rather than those matters which garner quick and easy publicity”.

He told the JC: “To argue that the objects of abuse — and those who only attach positive connotatio­ns to their connection to historic traditions — are the problem is looking through the wrong end of the telescope.

“I hope the club, which has an excellent record and commitment to dealing with these issues, is steadfast.

“I strongly support firm action to deal with the pejorative antisemiti­c use of the world ‘yid’ by any football supporter and tackling antisemiti­sm wherever it arises. Chelsea’s action to address this is to be applauded.”

Many Spurs fans refer to themselves as “Yids” or the “Yid Army”, a tradition which is thought to date back to the 1970s.

Writing in The Times on Monday, columnist and Spurs fan David Aaronovitc­h argued in favour of the fans’ right to reclaim the word, saying it originated in a “gloriously imaginativ­e” reaction to far-right fans of opposing teams.

Mr Aaronovitc­h, who is also a JC columnist, wrote: “When attempts at prosecutin­g Spurs fans for using the Y-word failed, context is everything. A word or a phrase is only abuse if you’re using it to abuse. Still, it’s an unlovely word and hopefully if rival fans were dissuaded from antisemiti­sm for a period of years, its defiant but nonabusive use would fade into history.”

In a joint statement with the Board of Deputies, WJC chief executive Robert Singer said: “The word ‘Yid’ has for years been re-appropriat­ed from its original Yiddish to carry a distinctly pejorative and antisemiti­c message, and its use by fans in the stands, either as a self-designated nickname or as a slogan against rivals must not be tolerated in any way.

“We would also ask Tottenham Hotspur to take a stand against the use of ‘Yid Army’, ‘Yid’ and ‘Yiddos’ by their fans.”

A Community Security Trust spokesman described the word as “an antisemiti­c insult”, calling for Spurs fans to “grow up and... take responsibi­lity for their own actions”.

Simon Johnson, the chief executive of the JLC, added: “The Y-word is a derogatory expression for a Jewish person.

“It is a word that has been adopted by Tottenham fans. It is wrong for them to say that they are ‘reclaiming’ it.”

Three Spurs fans were arrested in an attempted crackdown in 2014 for using “Yid” during a Europa League game, but the Crown Prosecutio­n Service discontinu­ed these cases.

It is antisemiti­c to chant ‘Yid’ in a certain way

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Spurred on: Tottenham fans say they adopted the ‘Yid’ chant as a way of countering hate from rival supporters
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Spurred on: Tottenham fans say they adopted the ‘Yid’ chant as a way of countering hate from rival supporters

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