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Spurs and Ajax face a Champions League clash - but which club is more Jewish?

Journalist Anthony Clavane looks back at the two clubs' history ahead of their semi-final

April 24, 2019 09:58
Spurs Ajax split

ByAnthony Clavane, anthony clavane

3 min read

I always used to wince when my family asked this kind of question, but on Tuesday I will be watching Tottenham’s Champions League semi-final against Ajax and wondering which result will be “good for the Jews”.

I support neither team but the great thing about this match is that it is a rare clash between two big European clubs with strong Jewish identities.

They are not the only ones, of course. We have been kicking balls around in this country ever since Norwood Jews Orphanage thrashed Endearment 11-1 in 1901. There have been, periodically, important connections to the likes of Leeds, Leyton Orient, the two Manchester teams, Oldham, Brighton and several others.

Arsenal, especially, have always had a Jewish fan base. Long before their north London rivals, they were using their 
programmes to wish supporters well over Yom Kippur. Outside of Britain, several clubs — including Hakoah Vienna, MTK Budapest, Bayern Munich and Roma - have historically been perceived as Jewish.