Club Deportivo Palestino
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Template:Expand language Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Club Deportivo Palestino is a professional football club based in the city of Santiago, Chile and plays in the Primera División de Chile. Club Deportivo Palestino was founded in 1920 by Palestinian immigrants, and the club has maintained a strong symbolic connection to Palestinian identity, using the colours of the Palestinian flag in its kit and incorporating a map of pre-1948 Palestine into its logo and uniforms. It is known for public displays of solidarity with Palestinians, including fans chanting pro-Palestinian slogans and players once entering the field wearing keffiyehs.[1] In 2014, the team was fined and banned by Chile’s football association for altering the number "1" on jerseys to resemble the outline of historic Palestine.[1]
The club has won two national titles and reached the semi-finals of the Copa Libertadores in 1979. The club is supported by Chile’s Palestinian community, the largest outside the Arab world, and Palestino also engages in community outreach, supporting women’s football and financing football schools in the Palestinian territories.
History
The club was founded on 8 August 1920, when they participated in a colonial competition in Osorno. It was founded by a group of Palestinians; the name of the club reflects the origin in Chile's Palestinian community.[2][1]
According to American historian Brenda Elsey,[3]
"Leaders of the Arab immigrant community who hoped to find a niche within popular culture for their organizations decided to participate in football once again in 1940s".
Beginnings in professional football
In 1952, the Football Federation of Chile set up the first professional leagues.
Palestino was accepted into the Second Division, which they won to attain promotion to the Primera División.
1955 title
In 1955, the club won their first national championship under the coaching of Argentine captain Roberto Coll.
In that era, the club became known by the nickname millonario (Millionaire) because of their ability to attract top class footballers.
1978−present
In 1978, the club won their second league title; this time the team was led by Chilean captain Elías Figueroa.
In this campaign, they set a new record in the domestic tournament for the number of games unbeaten and soon won the Copa Chile to claim the league and cup double.
In 2004, the club became a registered company, but the change of status did not bring the expected improvement in results.
In the early 2000s, Chilean-Palestinian coach Nicola Hadwa recruited diaspora players for the Palestine national team. One notable player, Roberto Kettlun, born and raised in Chile, chose to represent Palestine and eventually moved to the West Bank to play for clubs such as Hilal Al-Quds and Ahli Al-Khaleel. He later returned to Palestino as sporting director, aiding in player recruitment and club development.
In 2006, they finished in 18th place out of 20 teams, forcing them to face a play-off against Fernandez Vial to keep their place in the top flight. Ultimately, the club would triumph, thus preserving its spot within the Chilean first division.
The club made a surprising run to the final of the Clausura 2008 tournament, where they lost to champions Colo-Colo. Following this success, the club intends to float on the Chilean and Palestinian stock exchanges.[4]
Palestino ended a 40-year trophy drought in 2018 by winning the Copa Chile, defeating Audax Italiano in the finals. Former Inter Milan and West Ham player Luis Jiménez, a Palestino academy graduate, returned late in his career to captain the team to victory.[2]
Following their domestic success, Palestino competed in the 2019 Copa Libertadores, facing top clubs such as Club Atlético River Plate and SC Internacional. While they did not progress far, the campaign elevated the club’s profile. In the 2020s, renewed conflict in Gaza has led the club to increase awareness and fundraising efforts related to Palestine.[2]
Club image
Motto
"More than a team, it is an entire people." (Template:Langx)
Colours
Mimicking the Flag of Palestine, the club's traditional colors have been red, green and black.[5]
Support
Not only from Palestinians in Chile, Palestino has also attracted the support from Gaza sympathisers in the country[6] and are considered as the "second national team" of Palestine.[5]
Rivalries
Palestino have rivalries with other immigrant-founded Santiago clubs in the Chilean Primera División, mainly Unión Española (founded by Spanish immigrants) and Audax Italiano (founded by Italian immigrants).
These games are known as the "Diaspora Derby" (Template:Langx).
Incident
2014 jersey ban
In January 2014, Palestino was fined the equivalent of $1,300 for using a new team jersey in the club's traditional colors, but with the number one in the squad numbers on the back shaped as the map of Palestine prior to the creation of Israel in 1948.[7] Jewish communities in Chile and the Israeli government[8] complained about the political significance of this, with a formal complaint to their national Federation being made by Patrick Kiblisky, owner of first-division club Ñublense.
The jerseys were said to have been first used in December 2013, although the club said they were used in the prior season. The federation banned the club from using the map on the back of the shirts and imposed a fine on the club on the grounds that the Federation is opposed to "any form of political, religious, sexual, ethnic, social or racial discrimination". On its Facebook page, the club stated:[9]
"For us, free Palestine will always be historical Palestine, nothing less."
Honours
National
Performance in CONMEBOL competitions
- Copa Libertadores: 7 appearances
- Copa Sudamericana: 7 appearances
Current squad
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First Team squad
Template:Updated <templatestyles src="Template:Football squad player/styles.css" /> Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Sponsors
Companies that Club Deportivo Palestino currently has sponsorship deals with include:
- Bank of Palestine
- Capelli Sport
- Alegrebet
- UAZ
Former coaches
- Template:Flagicon Luis Tirado (1952)
- Template:Flagicon Antonio Ciraolo (1953)
- Template:Flagicon Miodrag Stefanović (1955–57)
- Template:Flagicon Antonio de Mare (1958–59)
- Template:Flagicon Alejandro Scopelli (1960)
- Template:Flagicon Hugo Tassara (1961–62)
- Template:Flagicon José Della Torre (1963)
- Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Ladislao Pakozdi (1963)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1964)
- Template:Flagicon José Valdebenito (1964)
- Template:Flagicon Zezé Moreira (1964)
- Template:Flagicon Enrique Fernández (1965)
- Template:Flagicon Alejandro Scopelli (1966)
- Template:Flagicon Óscar Andrade (1967)
- Template:Flagicon Julio Baldovinos (1967)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1968–69)
- Template:Flagicon Sergio Lecea (1969)
- Template:Flagicon Isaac Carrasco (1970)
- Template:Flagicon Héctor Ortega (1970)
- Template:Flagicon Dante Pesce (1971)
- Template:Flagicon Alejandro Scopelli (1971)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1972)
- Template:Flagicon Humberto Díaz (1972)
- Template:Flagicon Néstor Isella (1973)
- Template:Flagicon Humberto Díaz (1973)
- Template:Flagicon Caupolicán Peña (1974–76)
- Template:Flagicon Fernando Riera (1977)
- Template:Flagicon Caupolicán Peña (1977–80)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1980)
- Template:Flagicon Mario Tuane (1980–81)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1981–83)
- Template:Flagicon Sasha Mitjaew (1984)
- Template:Flagicon Elson Beiruth (1984)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1984–85)
- Template:Flagicon Víctor Manuel Castañeda (1986)
- Template:Flagicon Orlando Aravena (1986–87)
- Template:Flagicon Víctor Manuel Castañeda (1988)
- Template:Flagicon Luis Ibarra (1988)
- Template:Flagicon Eugenio Jara (1988–89)
- Template:Flagicon Orlando Aravena (1989)
- Template:Flagicon Víctor Manuel Castañeda (1989)
- Template:Flagicon Guillermo Duarte (1990)
- Template:Flagicon Manuel Pellegrini (1990)
- Template:Flagicon Jorge Zelada (1991)
- Template:Flagicon Manuel Pellegrini (1991–92)
- Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Fernando Cavalleri (1992)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1992–93)
- Template:Flagicon Ricardo Dabrowski (1993)
- Template:Flagicon José Sulantay (1994)
- Template:Flagicon Elías Figueroa (1994–95)
- Template:Flagicon Germán Cornejo (1995–96)
- Template:Flagicon Orlando Aravena (1996)
- Template:Flagicon Jorge Aravena (1996–97)
- Template:Flagicon Manuel Pellegrini (1998)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (1998)
- Template:Flagicon Ricardo Dabrowski (1998–01)
- Template:Flagicon Fernando Carvallo (2002)
- Template:Flagicon Daniel Salvador (2003)
- Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Nicola Hadwa (2004)
- Template:Flagicon Ricardo Toro (interim) (2004)
- Template:Flagicon Template:Ill (2004–05)
- Template:Flagicon Fernando Carvallo (2005)
- Template:Flagicon Daniel Salvador (2006)
- Template:Flagicon Jaime Pizarro (2006–07)
- Template:Flagicon Jorge Aravena (2007)
- Template:Flagicon Luis Musrri (2007–09)
- Template:Flagicon Jorge Aravena (2009–10)
- Template:Flagicon Jaime Escobar (interim) (2010)
- Template:Flagicon Gustavo Benítez (2010–11)
- Template:Flagicon José Daniel Carreño (2012)
- Template:Flagicon Emiliano Astorga (2012–14)
- Template:Flagicon Jaime Escobar (interim) (2014)
- Template:Flagicon Pablo Guede (2014–16)
- Template:Flagicon Nicolás Córdova (2016–2017)
- Template:Flagicon Omar Toloza (interim) (2017)
- Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Template:Ill (2017–18)
- Template:Flagicon Sebastián Méndez (2018)
- Template:Flagicon Ivo Basay (2018–2020)
- Template:Flagicon José Luis Sierra (2020-2021)
- Template:Flagicon Patricio Graff (2021)
- Template:Flagicon Gustavo Costas (2022)
- Template:Flagicon Vitamina Sánchez (2023-2024)
- Template:Flagicon Jorge Schwager (interim) (2024)
Women's team
The Palestino women's team plays in the Campeonato Nacional Primera División de Fútbol Femenino, the top women's football competition in Chile.
In 2015 they won the Clausura tournament, thus ending a ten-season title streak by Colo-Colo. The captain, Ashraf Khatib, lifted the title. She was quoted as saying it was a pleasure to be the first actual Palestinian woman to lift the title in Chile.[10][11]
Former Palestino forward María José Urrutia was a member of the Chile women's national football team for the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup. With a header against Thailand in Chile's 2–0 win in the group stage, she became the first Chilean player to score a goal in the FIFA Women's World Cup.[12]
Former Palestino defender Javiera Toro was also a member of the Chilean team at the 2019 tournament.
See also
References
External links
Template:Liga Chilena de Fútbol
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