The Brilliant Ajax, Part One
Who's a Jew? - That's the Question
Over 100,000 of the 140,000 Jews that lived in The
Netherlands before the war were dead in 1945. Almost every
Dutch-Jewish family name you'll find nowadays is mentioned in
the In Memoriam as well. There are, for example, five pages of
Van Praags in that book.
The handful of survivors had a major impact on football. The
Great Ajax from the early 1970s, was - in a way - partially
formed by the Holocaust.
Sjaak Swart, son of a Christian mother and a Jewish father
and born two years before the war, told the Nieuw
Israelietisch Weekblad ('New Israelite Weekly'): "My father
had seven brothers. Those brothers, his sister, his father and
his mother were taken away. We still had a pretty large family
of Jews, though. I was on familiar terms with a lot of
Jews."
Jaap van Praag, who'd been in hiding in a house on Overtoom,
where he could hardly move for three years, lost his little
sister and his parents. He would hardly talk about it later. If
his son Michael would ask questions about it, he'd shout: "I do
not want to talk about that - and that's final!"
Salo Muller is now a close-fisted man in his 60s, living in
a beautiful house behind the Concert Hall; a few kilometers
from the Rivierenbuurt ('River District') where he used to live
with his parents. He was six years old the last time he saw
them. They were standing amongst hundreds of Jews, driven
together on the stage of the Dutch Theatre. Muller, the
legendary Ajax masseur, wearing an Ajax pin on the lapel of his
blazer, says: "I wanted to go towards them, but a German took
me away. I've been screaming in that children's crèche
for a week."
I am writing this book in a former Jewish hospital on Henri
Polaklaan. One of the houses behind the premises, on Plantage
Middenlaan, used to be the crèche in which children like
Muller waited for their deportation. About 1,100 of them were
saved by chrèche personnel. Some of them escaped through
the room I am now working in.
Salo Muller escaped, too. He survived the war living in
eight different hiding addresses. Sometimes he was raised as a
Catholic, sometimes as a Protestant. "I didn't even know my
name, I didn't know when my birthday was, I've seen my parents
standing on the stage of that theater. I've got a war trauma,
too." After the liberation, he found out that his parents were
gassed. A sister of his mother took pity on him, and so, "weird
enough," he returned to the Rivierenbuurt.
Bennie Muller (1938) and Maup Caransa (1916) were boys from
Rapenburgerstraat, in the Jewish quarter. In the time Caransa
was a growing up boy over there, and Muller made his first
steps, the street was the heart of the Amsterdam Jewish
society. The famous Torah School Beth Hamidrash was there and
so was the equally famous café De Druif ('The
Grape'). At numbers 169 and 171 was an orthodox Jewish girls'
orphanage, next door was a synagogue, and next door to that the
Dutch Israelite Seminar, a branch of the Ben Hamidrash. About
sixty students went to school there.
Caransa, one out of five children of a coal-dealer, was a
tall, sandy-haired and blue-eyed boy, who didn't look Jewish at
all. He wrote me a letter, saying he 'can't remember ever to
have paid any attention to Ajax before World War Two, because
there was just no money and time to do so'. He sang at services
at the Portugese synagogue, and pushed a car around at the age
of twelve, selling oil and coal. Many decades later, as Caransa
had become the owner of large patches of Amsterdam, old friends
would still call him 'the oil man' or 'the Portugese'. People
say that he once answered an Arab sheik, who asked him what he
did for a living: "I started out in the oil business, just like
you."
In 1936, his father Salomon won the lottery, a prize of
100,000 guilders. Until the money was safely brought to the
bank, Caransa and his three brothers would lie behind the front
door, armed with an axe. The future of the family seemed
secured. Caransa went to Paris for six weeks and spent 850
guilders there, which was more than he carried with him.
Back home he got a beating from his father. His mother,
Rachel, told him: "You are too lazy to work!" Maup packed a
towel and some soap in a small suitcase, muttered "I don't need
you people anyway" and left. He assorted laundry at the Jewish
Home for the Disabled and got his food at the Spuistraat
soup-kitchen. In 1941, he married a Catholic woman. In the nick
of time. His marriage and his non-Jewish looks saved him from
deportation, although he was imprisoned at Westerbork transit
camp for thirteen weeks.
He lived in the Jewish quarter during the rest of the war,
on the corner of Zwanenburgwal and Waterlooplein, in a house
that's now overshadowed by the Stopera, Amsterdam's
integrated Opera Hall and City Counsil. Het told newspaper
Het Parool in 1969: "I thought: when my parents come
back from the war, at least they'll know where to find me. They
never returned. Neither did my brothers." Caransa and his
sister Femma were the only ones left.
Bennie Muller exactly recalls the day his mother was taken
away. He told British journalist David Winner: "I had two
brothers and two sisters. We, the kids, were all standing there
crying. The Germans said: 'Oh well, let's leave them alone',
but the Dutch Nazi's said no."
Mrs. Muller was sent to Westerbork, but was saved because of
her marriage to a non-Jewish man. According to Bennie Muller,
about 150 of her relatives perished.
Rapenburgerstraat was deserted and quiet after the
liberation. The girl's orphanage was cleared out by the Nazi's
on 10 February 1943. Almost all Seminar students were dead. The
synagogue was looted, and almost all the buildings were
destroyed by Amsterdammers searching for fire-wood.
Today, Rapenburgerstraat is two streets, sort of. The even
side mainly consists of proper, new-built appartment blocks. On
the odd-numbered side, there's still something left of Muller's
and Caransa's street. That is: a lot of the old façades
are still intact, but only the Hebrew characters over the front
door of Beth Hamidrash indicate that Jews were once living
here. The NIW editorship resides in the building,
nowadays, and so does the 4 And 5 May
Memorial Committee. The girl's orphanage is now
Café-Bar Waterlooplein 77.
* * *
Referee Leo Horn moved from southern town Sittard to
Amsterdam as a child. He would later call that removal 'the
first liberation of my life'. Horn, who was expelled from the
Dutch Football Association in 1941 because he was Jewish, and
his friend Kuki Krol (father of seventies Ajax player Ruud
Krol) joined an Amsterdam based resistance group. Horn's
brother George and some other Jews went in hiding in Krol's
house.
Horn's pen-names in the resistance were 'doctor Van Dongen'
or 'engineer Varing'. His fellow resistance people did not know
who he really was, either. His colleague Wim Kuijt once
whispered in Horn's ear: "Do you think Jews would have the guts
to do what we do?"
Horn used to hide a lot of Jews at number 9, Nicolaas
Witsenkade. With a so-called 'hold-up unit', he held up two
German munition-wagons in the Spring of 1945, leaving ten
German soldiers behind, trussed up and gagged. Dressed in a
white doctor's coat and a stethoscope, 'doctor Van Dongen'
smuggled 'a key underground-person', wanted by the Gestapo, into
the 'Wilhelmina Gasthuis' hospital.
Horn's brother Edgar was murdered in the concentration
camps. Leo Horn, the most famous referee in Dutch football
history, swallowed Morgadon tranquillizers from 5 May 1945
until his death in 1995.
The father of Rob Cohen (now father-in-law and personal
manager of Ronald de Boer), survived the war thanks to a mixed
marriage as well. As a child he watched from a roof how the
Germans took his parents away from Weesperstraat. He lost two
brothers and a sister. After Cohen died, his family found a
letter in his wallet, which contained the story of her death in
Auschwitz.
In his cigar shop - an Ajax team picture from the sixties is
over the door - Bennie Muller would rather not talk about
Jewish matters. Muller (whose bluff hair makes him look not
Jewish at all) raises his hands to his head and rubs his
eyelids: "Do I have to? Everything will be dragged up again."
He shows me into the back room, hands me a chair 'for two
minutes' and talks for the next hour and a half.
I talked to Sjaak Swart on a terrible Amsterdam rainy day in
his restaurant inside Jaap Eden Sports Hall. I did not tell him
the exact truth. I knew he does not like talking about his
Jewish identity, so I've told him I wanted to interview him for
The Financial Times, about Ajax' centenary. I hope he'll
forgive me for the fact that he's in this book, too.
Swart and Muller played their first game together in 1947,
for TDW, a club that disappeared a long time ago. Almost all
the pre-war Jewish clubs were gone, so the Jews had to play
football somewhere else.
It's of major significance that they played for that club.
What would have happened if they had not been born in 1938, but
in 1902, like Eddy Hamel? They would probably have ended up
playing for a working-class Jewish club like AED. They were no
rich kids from South, or middle-class boys from the
Transvaalbuurt. Maybe they would have become heroes of Jewish
Amsterdam with AED, but maybe they would never have made it to
Ajax. Or the opportunity to join Ajax would have come too late,
like it happened to Johnny Roeg, and they would probably have
played the second fiddle.
But the Holocaust took place when they were toddlers. And so
it could occur that Muller joined Ajax at the age of ten. And
working-class boy Swart was assigned the right forward spot
that was once occupied by Eddy Hamel, the gentleman. The small
number of remaining Jews were provided better opportunities
after the war, in the whole of Holland.
In his restaurant, I ask Swart what his first club was. "Oh,
that's nice", he says, "just across the street from here, close
by. A small club, called OVVO." I remind him of the fact that
he and Muller played for TDW first. Damn yes, he remembered:
"We played one game together, and I still remember the
opponent: PCVB!"
After that, Swart joined OVVO, with which club he scored
five goals against an Ajax youth team. "Why don't you join
us?", an Ajax team leader asked. Swart: "My dad was a huge fan
of Ajax, almost from the time the club was founded, and he
would bring me along to Ajax on his bike. So it was not that
hard to say 'yes'."
I did not dare to ask Swart straight-forward questions about
Jewish matters. But towards the end of our conversation, after
he had comprehensively told me about his success as a player, I
asked what kind of player his dad used to be. Swart: "He was a
fast winger, my father. Good shot, but technically he was not
as good as his son."
"With what club did he play?" I asked.
Swart, in the mean time, had received some hard to describe
signals across the table, over our coffee cups. Signals of the
type that's exchanged by Freemasons. I've got dark hair and
dark skin, a broad nose and a wide mouth. I had displayed
interest in Bennie Muller. I had asked Swart about his family.
I knew that Ajax' money-lenders Wim and Freek van der Meyden
built pill-boxes for the Germans during the war. And as I asked
Swart about his dad, he replied: "He played for AED - you've
heard about that club, of course - as well as for OVVO and
TDW."
Nobody knows AED. Maybe there's a small number of old men in
Amsterdam, Tel Aviv or New York that still know that little
neighborhood club, that played its last game in 1941. Swart
just wanted to make clear to me: I am one, you are one.
I said: "Of course I know AED."
* * *
Salo Muller fanatically started practicing sports. "It was
an attempt to make up for everything I'd missed during the
war", he says. He subscribed with rowing club Amstel, but the
ballot-committee rejected him, ensuring him that he would feel
better at home with the 'Jewish' Poseidon. Every Jew I have
interviewed for this book was abused for being Jewish at some
point, but Muller is the only one of them to have been rejected
somewhere, after the war.
Sjaak Swart made his debut in Ajax-1 on 16 September 1956.
Bennie Muller followed on 5 January 1958. Salo Muller joined
the club as a masseur in 1959. Ajax was a mediocre
semi-professional football club in those days, of lesser
international significance than Blackpool from England or
Rot-Weiss Essen from Germany.
* * *
On the square of Rembrandtplein, just a few minutes away
from the deserted Jewish quarter, Rob Cohen's father owned a
sandwich shop called De Kuil ('The Pit'). Being expelled from
his two butcher's shops on Weesperstraat by the Germans, Cohen
senior had, according to his son 'rushed into his work for
100,000%'. Thus, he built himself a chain of butcher's
shops.
At De Kuil, located where you'll find bar-restaurant
Rhapsody nowadays, you would walk down two staircases before
entering a white-marble room, in which beef sausages hung from
the ceiling. Rinus Michels, Ajax' centre forward in the 1950s,
often dropped by so he could spy upon one of the employees:
Wil, who was later to become his wife.
Sitting in his bar-restaurant Soccer World, at the ArenA,
Rob Cohen says: "De Kuil was a famous Jewish sandwich shop -
not kosher." Jews would go there to buy a sandwich and
have a chat with some sort of imaginary family.
Cohen: "Everybody knows that generation. If something
happened, a daughter getting married or so, they would all come
by." The most famous customers of De Kuil were Maup Caransa and
his rival, Japie Kroonenberg. Like Caransa, Kroonenberg was a
native from a very poor family, who married a Christian wife
and became a real estate tycoon.
Cohen says: "All of a sudden, Caransa would buy the Schiller
Hotel, for example. That was marvellous, of course: reading
that Jaap Kroonenberg or Caransa had bought a hotel, or five
hotels. In those days, they really were sensational
people."
Times were different, back then, in a poorer Amsterdam, with
less big companies. The papers were full of news about a
handful of local tycoons, most of them Jews. In articles from
35 years ago, you find breath-taking articles about Caransa
buying the Doelen Hotel, possessing a self-portrait by
Rembrandt, driving a Rolls Royce.
On Sundays, people travelled to Ajax from De Kuil. Cohen:
"One person would have a parking licence and six people would
board that person's car. Or they'd take tram 9. It was a jumble
of people: Jews, and people with a Jewish heart. My dad was on
the main stand at De Meer. It's a shame he's never seen my
son-in-law play." As most people know, his son-in-law is Ronald
de Boer.
Cohen: "All people I knew went to Ajax, except myself. It
was a way to find distraction. There was not much entertainment
for people to enjoy, but there were a lot of things they wanted
to forget. I've never seen my father laying his head on the
table, saying 'God, what have they done to me?'."
* * *
If you want to understand the connection between the Jews
and Ajax, you should read Leon de Winter's novel
Supertex. I'll get back to that later. I now want to
talk about the main character in that novel: textile tycoon,
Simon Breslauer.
Breslauer is the only person from his family to have
survived the war; he rushed into his work and in this way he
set up the flourishing textile company Supertex. De Winter
writes: 'My father was an exacting man, who worked fifteen
hours a day. He had a short-tempered nature, which could turn a
smile into an angry grimace within an eye-wink. He always wore
an irreproachable suit and had the looks of a ladies' man.'
In many ways, Simon Breslauer is a typical example of a
Jewish man who survived the war. They did not want to think
about what had happened. Getting over it was impossible,
anyway. They had children right away (a lot of Dutch Jews were
born in 1946 and 1947) and named them after relatives that got
murdered. After that, they founded a business, because they
never ever wanted to be dependent on someone else again.
Before the war, many Jews already had a business of their
own (they could not find employment elsewhere), but the
Breslauers were of a new kind. One of their sons says: "There's
the ones who survived with their parents, and the ones
who survived without them. They're both meshuggah."
Jaap van Praag decided to wear perfect suits for the rest of
his life and he wanted to quit working on the age of 45. Using
a loan from his friend, Piet Smit, he re-started the company of
his father, Mozes.
Leo Horn started a textile shop during the war. He moved to
Jodenbreestraat in 1946, renting a building from Caransa. Horn
owned 31 branches at a certain point. Decades later, he would
tell newspaper Trouw: "I kept myself busy with my family
and my business. I just did not want to think about that damned
war anymore."
Maup Caransa bought his first premises in Amsterdam in 1946:
a little house in the area called Kattenburg, costing 750
guilders. He'd later say: "Then I thought: if I've got twenty
of those houses, I'll make a hundred guilders a week and I'll
never have to work again in my life." It turned out to be
slightly different, because people did not pay their rent.
Despite this, Caransa 'made it': in real estate, in car
tires, jeans, rain coats, army supplies. As far as real estate
is concerned: he mainly bought premises he knew from before the
war. He ended up possessing almost the entire squares of
Waterlooplein - "not for business purposes, it's private
property" - and Rembrandtplein, which tram drivers would
sometimes ironically announce as 'Caransaplein' ('Caransa
Square'). "I've rushed into work", Caransa once said.
The Breslauers from De Winter's book wanted to make money so
they could give it all to their children, so they were able to
save themselves if the Nazi's would come back. The Christians
had proved themselves un-reliable. Most of the Breslauers did
not want to be chic: they did not feel like becoming chairmen
of hockey clubs, or members of museum boards. They did not want
to repudiate the place where their parents had emerged from. "I
am not a culture-man", Caransa would often say.
Many of the Brealauers were hoping to withdraw from the
world of business one day. It did not happen. Meijer Stad did
not sell his company before he was 80 years old, Jaap van Praag
inspected his shops at Schiphol Airport on a daily basis, and
Caransa - well in his eighties - is still in business. The man
is worth an estimated hundred million guilders; Rob Cohen
thinks it's much more than that.
Not all men of Caransa's generation became 'Breslauers'.
Some of them became human wrecks for the rest of their lives,
or committed suicide. Others displayed a quite normal attitude
towards their work. In the world of Ajax, however, most Jews
were Breslauer-like men.
Caransa, his friend Appie Plotske (textile vendor on
Nieuwendijk), Kroonenberg, Cohen's father, Leo and George Horn
- they all went to Ajax. Dutch football was 'professional'
since 1954, but the payments were not too high.
Big companies like the ABN or Amro Banks were far too snooty
for the world of sports. Clubs depended on the quarters paid by
the spectators and the help of the occasional proletarian
business man. Van Zoest, the Ajax historian, says: "There never
was any money, they always had to barter. Ajax has been too
stingy to pay for anything until the early 1990s."
Sometimes the club was paid money, sometimes some people
just did the club some favours. The records, played during the
half-time break of games in De Meer, came from Jaap van Praag's
store at the Spui square. From 1950 to 1970 it usually was
De Ajax-Marsch ('The Ajax March'), sung by his brother
Max.
If Ajax would win the Dutch championship, father Cohen would
pay for dinner for the team, at De Kuil. Before the famous 'fog
match' against Liverpool, in 1966, Caransa organized a lunch
for the boards of both clubs, at the Doelen Hotel.
Walking along the tables, he shouted: "I am just crazy about
Ajax! I am totally confused!"
Left winger Piet Keizer used to drag bales of cloth in Leo
Horn's store; defender Ruud Krol would later learn how to weave
in George Horn's company. Isaac Koekoek and Max Polak, Rob
Cohen's father-in-law, would sometimes hire Ajax players,
too.
On behalf of Ajax, Leo Horn accompanied the referees
assigned to lead European Ajax games. "If they want YabYum, they'll
get Yab Yum", was his device. According to Horn, the referees
would often give Ajax the benefit of the doubt. If he was
assigned to lead an Ajax league game himself, people at the
club would say: "That's all settled then!" Horn was known as an
Ajax supporter, who once amicably tapped Sjaak Swart on the
bottom after he had fouled Feyenoord player Gerard Kerkum.
Swart: "Leo Horn might have been an Ajax fan, but if he
whistled our games, he was rather against us. Frans Derks
usually favored us, even though he didn't have the reputation
of being an Ajax fan, but he hated the 'Krauts'" I think Swart
is hereby referring to the image of the Golden Ajax: a 'Jew's
club'.
You could, in a way, call it a Jewish family. Alright, they
were not related, but a lot of Jewish familes were sort of 'put
together' in this fashion, after the war. A survivor of about
the same age as your grandpa, who got gassed, became your new
grandpa. You'd call someone else 'uncle', you's make up new
cousins - all in order to try and continue with your life. The
situation at Ajax was similar.
Salo Muller, the masseur who had Caransa and Kroonenberg as
two of his clients, explains: "You see, in sports you approach
other people in a pretty spontaneous, straight-forward way. If
Caransa entered the room, he would hug me. Peter Post, the
racing cyclist, did the same. And if I bumped into Japie
Kroonenberg, in town, he would always be very kind, shouting:
'Hey, are you making some money these days, or what?'"
According to the cliché, a football club is a family,
which definitely goes for the people who don't have a real
family anymore. The Ajax family was perfect as Jaap van Praag
became the club's chairman, on 16 July, 1964. He was regarded
as a temporary chairman. Jan Melchers, the chairman who got
dumped to make way for Van Praag, was quoted saying: "The good
million guilders we saved, will now probably be gone pretty
soon."
Two sugar uncles and members of the Ajax family of that time
were definitely not Jewish: Wim and Freek van der Meyden. Old
Ajacieden still refer to that duo as 'the pill-box builders'.
Maybe those pill-boxes prevented them from becoming members of
the Ajax board, but the two donors did become official members
in the Summer of 1965. They had a certain power over the
players, whom they would lend money to buy houses or cigar
stores with.
They had nothing against Jews. Salo Muller remembers that
one of the two (people almost never distinguish between Wim and
Freek) showed a photograph of the synagogue on Linnaueusstraat,
which they had helped to restore. Even Cohen took advantage of
them. A year after his marriage, as he still had no place to
live, his father-in-law had a chat with Kroonenberg, who had a
chat with one of the Van der Meydens, whose son-in-law ended up
arranging a house for Cohen, on Bolestein in the Jewish area of
Buitenveldert. Over there, Cohen became the neighbor of Ajax
player Theo van Duivenbode, be it coincidental or not.
Swart told me: "I had a cigar store. Wim and Freek
definitely helped me with that." "The pill-box builders", I
replied, in a Pavlov-reaction to hearing their names. Swart
said: "I don't know. Yes, so people say. But no, we should not
talk about that. We definitely should not talk about just
that."
How much money the Van der Meydens and the several
'Breslauers' invested in Ajax will never be revealed. Van Zoest
says: "It all happened under the table, in some sort of dodgy
circuit. Caransa was always talked about in a mysterious way."
Newspapers would sometimes, ironically, call Ajax
'Caransajax'.
Round 1965, the club suddenly started to spend shocking
amounts of money. Co Prins was bought back from German club
Kaiserslautern for 120,000 Deutschmarks, goalkeeper Gert Bals
switched from PSV to Ajax and Ajax even paid 375,000 guilders
to Feyenoord for Henk Groot: such an enormous amount that the
club decided not to reveal it to the public. It was said that
Ajax had initially tried to swap Groot for Bennie Muller.
"Sheer nonsense", said Jaap van Praag about the rumour that
Caransa had paid the transfer fee for Groot.
In a forgotten book from the 1960s, called Ajax: Een
Klasse Apart ('Ajax: A Class Apart'), written by Gerth van
Zanten, Van Praag is quoted saying: 'Caransa is totally nuts
about Ajax. He provides us some advice, every now and then.
That's something completely different than him deciding what
happens within the club. He once gave us this advice: if we
wanted to roof over the new stand, we should float a
debenture-loan. That turned out to be a golden advice. But
'Caransajax' is annoying, as if he's some kind of a
dictator.'
This may be true or not ("I have never caught Jaap van Praag
speaking the truth", Johan Cruiyff once said), but Maup Caransa
was definitely a well-respected man at Ajax. He's said to have
had plans for a big, new stadium in Buitenveldert, because De
Meer was too small and very hard to reach by car. He wanted big
companies to invest in football. Caransa himself invested in
several Amsterdam clubs.
He flew along with the team for the away game against
Liverpool in 1966. Aboard the plane, he lost a game of poker,
first against Johan Cruyff and after that against Piet Keizer.
(Van Zanten recalls: 'The pool was well forced up, as Keizer
wiped away Caransa's three aces with a full house.').
After the arrival in Liverpool, Caransa said: "If you guys
score me one in the first fifteen minutes, I've got an
additional bonus waiting for you."
Cruyff: "I'll talk it over with the guys. But you know we
only talk about large amounts, just like yourself."
Caransa: "I never calculate with a loss."
Without Cruyff, there would have been no Golden Ajax. But
maybe there would have been no Golden Ajax without the
Breslauers either. Let's go back to the 1963-1964 season, the
year before Van Praag became chairman and Cruyff made his debut
in the first team. DWS won the title, Ajax was fifth, and in
that year's Eredivisie, Blauw Wit was playing as well. De
Volewijckers relegated the year before. In other words: Ajax
had plenty of competition, even within Amsterdam.
But the Breslauers made the difference. It did not require
that much money: as Bennie Muller received an interesting offer
from Belgium's Standard Liege in 1962, Ajax raised his salary
to 7,000 guilders.
An Amsterdam talent probably preferred Ajax over DWS,
because finding a job in the textile sector was well possible
at Ajax. The conditions at Ajax, which Johan Cruyff would
always talk about, were the best.
At Ajax, you'd have the opportunity to play with well-payed,
famous players such as Henk Groot and Co Prins. Captain Bennie
Muller, who had played five games for Oranje, the Dutch
national team, and Sjaak Swart, the gifted right winger ("I
belong to the category of Garrincha, Matthews and Swart"),
played there since their childhood.
© Simon Kuper; all rights reserved. Reproduction,
redistribution or re-use of any kind prohibited without written
permission by the author.