TuS Makkabi Berlin

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TuS Makkabi Berlin
logo
Full name TuS Makkabi Berlin e.V.
Founded 22 October 1898
Ground Maifeld Olympiastadion
Capacity 2,500
Chairman Flag of Germany Tuvia Schleizinger
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

FC Makkabi Berlin is a German football club based in Berlin. The team is the football department of the sports club TuS Makkabi Berlin.

Contents

[edit] History

Created in 1898, predecessor club Bar Kochba Berlin was one of the largest Jewish organizations in the world by 1930 with over 40,000 members from 24 countries, part of the general Bar Kochba movement intended to promote physical education and Jewish heritage. The club fielded teams in several sports including a football side which competed in the city leagues between 1911 and 1929.

Bar Kochba Youth Festival
Bar Kochba Youth Festival

In 1929 Bar Kochba merged with Hakoah Berlin to form the sports club Bar Kochba-Hakoah. The Hakoah side had enjoyed increasing success, capturing three consecutive lower division championships between 1925 and 1927. They were promoted each time until, by 1928, they were playing first tier football. The newly combined side continued to compete as Hakoah after 1929.

The rise to power of the Nazis in the early 30s led to discrimination against Jews and by 1933 Jewish teams were excluded from general competition and limited to play in separate leagues or tournaments. In 1938 Jewish teams were banned outright as discrimination turned to persecution.

Logo of predecessor side Hakoah Berlin
Logo of predecessor side Hakoah Berlin

In the aftermath of World War II Jewish sports and cultural associations eventually re-emerged in Germany. On 26 November 1970 TuS Makkabi Berlin was formed out of the merger of Bar-Kochba Berlin (gynmastics and athletics), Hakoah Berlin (football, re-established 1945) and Makkabi Berlin (boxing). The football side of the club played in third and fourth tier competition in the 70s and 80s before leaving to join Fvgg Wannsee in 1987. Wannsee also played as a third and fourth division side until collapsing in the mid-90s and slipping first to the Landesliga Berlin-2 (VI) and then to the Berzirksliga Berlin (VII) by the end of the decade. Makkabi's footballers returned to the fold in 1997 and since 2003 have also played in the Bezirksliga Berlin.

Today the sports club has some 500 members and is one of the largest Maccabi associations in the country. The club strongly promotes dialogue between Jews and non-Jews in a sports context.

[edit] Stadium

Makkabi Berlin plays at the Maifeld Olympiastadion, a side field of Berlin's Olympic Stadium. Prior to 2001 the team played at Stadion Wilmersdorf, built in 1951 with a capacity of 38,000, but resized to accommodate only 2,500.

[edit] Anti-semitism

Jewish sports clubs continue to occasionally meet anti-semitism on the field. Recently, in October, 2006 in Makkabi's match versus the second team squad of VSG Altglienicke in Berlin's Kreisliga-B, fans and players were reported to have chanted "Gas the Jews", "Auschwitz is back" and "Führer, Führer" as well as other slogans[1]. The case drew extensive media coverage in Germany as well as Israel[2].

[edit] External links

Official
Unofficial

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ German club sanctioned after anti-Semitic abuse. Reuters (2006-10-13). (Retrieved on 2006-10-28)
  2. ^ (Hebrew) שוב אנטישמיות בגרמניה: קריאות "גז ליהודים" לשחקני מכבי ברלין. Yediot Aharonot (2006-10-7). (Retrieved on 2006-10-28)