Dutch fans arrested after chanting ‘Jews burn best’ on Holocaust Memorial Day
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Dutch fans arrested after chanting ‘Jews burn best’ on Holocaust Memorial Day

Feyenoord supporters held by police after reportedly singing antisemitic chant during a match on 27 January

Feyenoord's De Kuip Stadium in 2006
Feyenoord's De Kuip Stadium in 2006

Dutch police arrested five football  supporters allegedly for singing at a match an increasingly popular chant about burning Jews.

The incident, which reflects both growing resolve to punish chanters and the proliferation of antisemitic sports chants, took place near the De Kuip stadium in Rotterdam on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, Jan. 27.

“My father was in the commandos, my mother was in the SS, together they burned Jews ’cause Jews burn the best,” the suspects chanted, according to the Centre for Information and Documentation on Israel, a Dutch watchdog on antisemitism known as CIDI. It called the chant a “recurring problem” in a statement.

The suspects, who were fined £440 ( €500)  each, allegedly were cheering for the Feyenoord team of Rotterdam, who won a match over Amsterdam’s Ajax team.
Ajax is one of several European football  teams that are seen as historically Jewish. Fans from rival teams often taunt supporters and players of the supposedly Jewish teams with antisemitic limericks and symbols, though the song about burning Jews is seen as among the most offensive of these taunts.

The chant, whose use was first reported by the media in 2015, has proliferated in the Netherlands and Belgium in recent years.

It has appeared in situations connected to neither Jews nor football , including a high school graduation party in 2016 near Amsterdam.

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