Jutrzenka Kraków was a
Jewish minority Polish football club during the interwar period. The club existed until 1939. Fans and players of the club were generally associated with the
Bund political party. The main rival of Jutrzenka was the club
Makkabi Kraków, which was associated with the Zionist movement and political parties. The matches between the two teams were generally referred to as "Holy War" long before that became a common reference to matches between
Cracovia
Cracovia is the Latin name for the Polish city of Kraków
Kraków (), or Cracow, is the second-largest and one of the oldest cities in Poland. Situated on the Vistula River in Lesser Poland Voivodeship, the city dates back to the seventh cen ...
and
Wisła
Wisła (; german: Weichsel; cs, Visla) is a town in Cieszyn County, Silesian Voivodeship, southern Poland, with a population of about 11,132 (2019), near the border with Czech Republic. It is situated in the Silesian Beskids mountain range in t ...
.
Józef Klotz
Józef Klotz (2 January 1900 – 1941) was a Polish footballer who played centre-half. He scored the first-ever goal for the Poland national football team. He was killed by the Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1941.
Biography
Klotz was born in Kra ...
played for Jutrzenka Kraków, which he joined as a youth team player and played for from 1912 to 1925.
Jutrzenka played one season in
I liga
I liga ( pl, Pierwsza liga, ), currently named Fortuna I liga due to its sponsorship by Fortuna, is the men's second professional association football division of the Polish football league system, below the Ekstraklasa and above the II liga vi ...
in 1927 when it took the last, fourteenth place. Another success of Jutrzenka was placing second in A-Class (the highest level for soccer in the Kraków region) in 1924, behind Wisła Kraków and just ahead of Cracovia.
Jutrzenka's stadium was located at the present site of the stadium of Wisła Kraków.
The animosity between Jutrzenka and Makkabi was sufficiently intense that in arguments within KOZPN (the organization of Kraków area soccer teams), the Zionist Makkabi often made tactical alliances with the somewhat antisemitic Wisła (Wisła's charter banned non-Catholic players from its ranks) against Jutrzenka and its more democratic ally Cracovia. In general, for political and social reasons, Jutrzenka was associated with Cracovia while Makkabi was associated with Wisła (the intense rivalry between Cracovia and Wisła persists to this day).
Notable players
*
Ludwik Gintel
Ludwik Gintel ( he, לודוויק גינטל; 26 September 1899 – 11 July 1973) was a Polish Olympic footballer.
Early and personal life
Gintel was born Kraków. He was Jewish. He worked as an architect and bank clerk.
Football career
G ...
(1899–1973), Polish-Israeli Olympic footballer
*
Józef Klotz
Józef Klotz (2 January 1900 – 1941) was a Polish footballer who played centre-half. He scored the first-ever goal for the Poland national football team. He was killed by the Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1941.
Biography
Klotz was born in Kra ...
(1900–1941), Polish footballer; killed in the
Warsaw Ghetto
The Warsaw Ghetto (german: Warschauer Ghetto, officially , "Jewish Residential District in Warsaw"; pl, getto warszawskie) was the largest of the Nazi ghettos during World War II and the Holocaust. It was established in November 1940 by the G ...
Further reading
* Belda, Maciej Władysław. ''The Maccabees of Sport: Jewish Sport in Kraków''. Kraków: Historical Museum of Krakow & Stara Synagoga, 2012. .
References
External Links
Poland – Polonia Minor ClubsŻydzi – WikiPasy.pl - Encyklopedia KS Cracovia
Jewish anti-Zionism in Poland
Jewish football clubs
Jews and Judaism in Kraków
Bundism in Europe
Football clubs in Kraków
Association football clubs disestablished in 1939
Defunct football clubs in Poland
Association football clubs established in 1910
1910 establishments in Poland
1939 disestablishments in Poland
1910 establishments in Austria-Hungary
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