André Kamperveen

André Kamperveen
Born Rudi André Kamperveen
(1924-09-27)September 27, 1924
Paramaribo, Surinam
Died December 8, 1982(1982-12-08) (aged 58)
Fort Zeelandia, Paramaribo, Suriname
Occupation
Spouse(s)
  • Lea van Leuvenum (m. 1980–82)
Children
Association football career
Playing position
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1945–1948 MVV ? (?)
1950–1951 Paysandu ? (?)
1954–1957 HFC Haarlem ? (?)
Total ? (?)
National team
1945–1954 Suriname ? (?)
Teams managed
1958–1962 Suriname
1958–1964 SV Transvaal

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Basketball career

Position Point Guard
Career history
1945–48 Nationaal Leger

Rudi André Kamperveen (September 27, 1924 - December 8, 1982) was a Surinamese football player, sports administrator, politician and businessman.

During his playing career, the centre forward represented and captained the Suriname national football team in the 1940s. He played professionally in Brazil (Paysandu Sport Club) and Netherlands during his playing career, becoming the first Surinamese player to play professionally in the Netherlands in the process while plying his trade for HFC Haarlem.

After his playing career he became Minister for Sport in Suriname. He also helped establish the Caribbean Football Union which was formed in 1978 and he was selected as the union's first President. He was also a vice-president of FIFA.

He was killed in 1982 as part of the December murders. His body reportedly showed injuries to the jaw and a swollen face, 18 bullet wounds in the chest, a shot wound in the right temple, a fractured femur and a fractured arm.[1]

He was inducted into the CONCACAF hall of fame.[2] The André Kamperveen Stadion is named in his honour.

Early life

Known as Suriname’s Man of the People, Kamperveen or 'Ampie' as he was more commonly called was born 27 September 1924 in Paramaribo, Surinam. Having pursued athletics, basketball, boxing and judo, football was his first love and the sport he was best at. He started playing as an 11-year old on the Dr. Sophie Redmond Straat and signs of potential were noticeable at an early age. In 1942 he was called up for military service at the age of 18.[3]

Association football career

Club career

MVV

Kamperveen joined the military club MVV during his service, competing in the Hoofdklasse, the top flight of football in Suriname. He was a crowd favorite, scoring many goals and helping MVV to win a national championship in 1948.[3]

Paysandu SC

In 1950, he joined Paysandu Sport Club from Belém, Brazil where he signed on a 1-year contract. He became the first professional football player from Suriname, joining a club that was used to winning, this proved to be a big change for Kamperveen, where he learned Brazilian Portuguese in order to communicate with his teammates.[4]

In December 1952 a Caribbean All-Stars team came to Suriname to play exhibition matches at the Cultuurtuinlaan. Kamperveen was called up to play for the Caribbean All-Star team together with Michel Kruin and Humphrey Mijnals from Suriname. He scored two goals in the opening match for the Caribbean All-Stars against the Suriname national team in a 2–2 draw. Two more matches were played against the national team, which ended in a draw and a loss for the All-Stars, while two additional matches played were lost to S.V. Robinhood and S.V. Voorwaarts. It is worth mentioning that Kamperveen had already played for the Suriname national team prior to being called up for the Caribbean regional team.[5]

HFC Haarlem

In 1954, Kamperveen relocated to the Netherlands to study at the CIOS in Overveen. Aside from football he took classes in boxing, judo, jiu-jitsu and basketball.[3] After completion of his studies he attended the Sporthochschule in Cologne, West Germany.[3] During his period in the Netherlands he signed with HFC Haarlem competing in the Netherlands Football League Championship and in the KNVB Cup and becoming the first Surinamese player to compete in the Netherlands.[3] He scored two goals against Racing Club Heemstede on 19 August 1956 in a 2–1 win in the first round of the KNVB Cup.[6] Haarlem were however eliminated in the second round by Alkmaar '54. That same year, Kamperveen graduated with an A-level diploma from the KNVB, the highest level diploma issued by the Dutch governing body of football. At the end of the season he returned to Suriname.[3]

International career

Suriname

Kamperveen played for the Suriname national team. He made his debut in 1945 at the age of 21.[3] Playing as a center forward, he earned the captain armband in his first year with the team.[3] In 1946 the national team travelled to Willemstad, Curaçao to participate in a tournament with Curaçao, Aruba and Colombia and Dutch club Feyenoord. Suriname were able to draw 1–1 with Colombia in their opening match, losing to Curaçao 6–0, and suffering record loses to Aruba and Feyenoord (8–1). The tournament was won by Feyenoord.[5] On 2 February 1947 he scored four goals in a 9–0 win over French Guiana, the record highest win recorded by the Suriname national team.[3]

In July 1948, Kamperveen travelled to the Netherlands with the Suriname national team, the teams first ever trip to Europe.[5] Kamperveen scored a goal in the opening match, which saw the national team play Ajax at the De Meer Stadion ending in a 2–2 draw.[5] Additional games were played against Feyenoord, Tilburg XI, DFC and Den Haag XI. Kamperveen scored four goals on the tour in total.[5]

In 1951, the Suriname national team played a series of friendly matches against Náutico from Recife, Brazil.[5] Kamperveen scored once in two matches played.[5] In 1 August 1954 the Netherlands played Suriname at the newly built National Stadion in Paramaribo. Kamperveen played the full match in the 4–3 loss at home.[5] Two days later the two teams played again ending in 2–0 loss to the Netherlands for Suriname. In 1957 he played in a friendly match for the national team against visiting SK Rapid Wien from Austria winning the match 3–1 at home.[7]

Managerial career

Suriname

In 1958, Kamperveen took over as manager of the Suriname national team.[3] On 30 July 1958 the national team suffered its biggest loss under Kamperveen, when they were defeated 9–2 by the Netherlands at the National Stadion.[3] He managed the team in their first ever World Cup qualifications ahead of the 1962 FIFA World Cup in Chile.[5]

SV Transvaal

He took over the managerial position at S.V. Transvaal in 1958 as well, leading the team to the national championship in the Hoofdklasse in 1962.[3]

Career statistics

International goals

Scores and results list Suriname' goal tally first.
Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 2 February 1947 Cultuurtuinlaan, Paramaribo, Suriname  French Guiana
2–0
9–0
International friendly
2.
3–0
3.
6–0
4.
8–0
5. 29 August 1953 National Stadion, Paramaribo, Suriname Netherlands Aruba
1–0
3–3
6. 1 September 1953
1–1
3–3
7.
2–1
8.
3–3

Honours

Player

MVV[3]

Manager

SV Transvaal[3]

Individual

Basketball career

Kamperveen played many sports apart from football. Basketball was one of his favorites, having joined the basketball team of the Surinamese military after enlisting.[8] Basketball had arrived in Suriname in 1941 when the U.S. military arrived on November 24th.[8] Games were organized between teams of the battalions of both militaries and local community teams.[8] The local basketball teams 'Surinam' and 'Chung Fa Foei Kon', a Chinese basketball club from Suriname and one of the strongest in the sports national history, were among the first teams to register in the country. Kamperveen played point guard for the basketball team of the Nationaal Leger.[8]

The Surinamese Basketball Association was founded in 1947 with Kamperveen competing in the first official season. Kamperveen also played for the Suriname national basketball team at the same time that he was playing for the national football team.[8]

November 29, 1957 was the first time the national basketball team played inside an arena. The game was between the national teams of Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago. Kamperveen officiated the game which ended in a 81-78 loss to Trinidad and Tobago for Suriname.[8]

Judo career

André Kamperveen
Other names Ampie
Nationality Surinamese
Style Judo, Jiu-Jitsu
Fighting out of Paramaribo, Suriname
Team Kodokan (Suriname)
Rank 2nd dan judo[3]
Years active 1954–1957

Kamperveen became the first black belt in the history of judo in Suriname. While studying in the Netherlands at CIOS, Kamperveen took up judo graduating to 2nd dan in 1957.[9] On 3 May 1957 Kamperveen opened the first dojo in Paramaribo, known as Kodokan on the Mgr. Wulfingstraat.[9] Named after the original Kodokan in Tokyo, Japan, the Kodokan dojo is of great importance to the development of the practice in Suriname, organizing the first tournaments, it is the dojo where judoka Eddy Murray was given his first belts. Murray would go on to play a much bigger role in the Sport.[9]

In 1964, Kamperveen made an attempt at founding the first national judo/jiu-jitsu association in Suriname. Although the attempt failed it did serve to further promote judo in the outlying districts of Suriname. That year he graduated judoka in Nieuw Nickerie during half time of a football match as manager of S.V. Transvaal. In 1968 he founded the Surinamese Judo Association, becoming the first chairman of the organization.[3]

Broadcasting and Journalism

On 15 December 1950 the first edition of 'Sport Ontspannings Kroniek' (also known as SOK) was published as a weekly sports newspaper. Although not the first sports paper in Suriname, the previous publication folded after only two years in existence. Kamperveen and Jules Defares were the directors of the new paper. Initially a weekly, it was eventually published twice a week, becoming a weekly once more by 1955.[10] Kamperveen contributed a great deal to sports journalism in Suriname. He was heavily involved in some of the earliest live radio broadcasting of football matches as well, working with Surinamese radio stations Rapar, Apintie and SRS.[10] He founded the VSJS (Vereniging van Sportjournalisten in Suriname (English, Association of Sports journalists in Suriname), becoming the first chairman of the organization in 1963.[3]

On 20 October 1966 the first Surinamese television station went on air, the Surinaamse Televisie Stichting (STVS), and two years later, Kamperveen produced the first weekly sports show in Suriname for the station called 'Sportrevue'.[10]

Radio ABC

On 6 December 1975 Kamperveen's dream, to one day own his own radio station, finally came true. Ampies Broadcasting Corporation Suriname, commonly known as ABC, the lovestation was born. After years of working for Apintie, Kamperveen finally owned his own station. Both his Sons, Johnny and Henk Kamperveen joined him to work at the station, Johnny as a host, and Henk as a director. Radio ABC is a popular station in Suriname, blending news, activities, sports, humor and a lot of music.[10]

Administrative roles in Sports

Kamperveen held many administrative roles in regards to recreation, youth and sports throughout his entrepreneurial career. In 1957 he graduated with an A-level diploma from the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB), having completed studies at the CIOS and attending the Sportshochschule in West Germany. After becoming a board member of the Surinamese Football Association, he held various positions within the board of the CONCACAF, the continental governing body for association football in North America, Central America and the Caribbean. He also helped form the Caribbean Football Union becoming the first president of the organization, and was elected vice-president of FIFA, the global governing body for football.[3]

Administrative positions held over the years include:

That year Kamperveen as vice-president of FIFA appeared along the center circle at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium in Madrid, Spain as king Juan Carlos I of Spain kicked off the 1982 FIFA World Cup opening ceremony.[12] Kamperveen would also witness the beginning of Surinamese compatriots Frank Rijkaard and Ruud Gullit's International career with the Netherlands in the buildup to the tournament before losing his life in the december murders. He would not survive to witness the rise and influence of Surinamese footballers in Dutch football throughout the eighties and nineties.[13]

Personal life

Kamperveen is the father of three children from his first marriage. Two Sons, Johnny and Henk, and a daughter Lilian. In 1976 his Sons joined him at Radio ABC, Johnny became a popular radio host, while Henk became a director of the station. He was married to Lea van Leuvenum, his second wife. They were married in 1980 in New York City following his divorce from his previous marriage, they had no children together.[14]

Political activities

Following the 1980 Surinamese coup d'état, Kamperveen was appointed Minister of Culture, Youth and Sports under Minister-president Henk Chin A Sen. Due to disagreements over the political direction of the Nationale Militaire Raad (NMR), he denounced his position and became vocal about his opposition through writing and on live radio on his own ABC station. Kamperveen believed the country should head in a more democratic direction, while Dési Bouterse wanted a military dictatorship.

December murders

Main article: December murders

On December 7, 1982 at 2:00 am, he and his wife were interrupted from their sleep by soldiers of Dési Bouterse, the then dictator of Suriname. His guard dogs were shot and Kamperveen was taken away to Fort Zeelandia, where he and 14 other men who had voiced opposition to the military regime were heard as "suspects in a trial" by Bouterse and other sergeants in a self-appointed court. After these "hearings" they were tortured and shot dead. The circumstances have not yet become completely clear; on December 10, 1982, Bouterse claimed on national television that all of the detainees had been shot dead "in an attempt to flee". That day his Wife went to the hospital to identify the body. He had sustained injuries to the jaw and a swollen face, 18 bullet wounds in the chest, a shot wound in the right temple, a fractured femur and a fractured arm.[15]

His son Johnny had initially been reported as one of the victims of the murders. He was however able to escape abduction. and the family members fled to the Netherlands. The ABC Radio building had been torched to the ground and completely destroyed on the night of the abduction as well. Kamperveen's funeral was on 13 December 1982, buried at the Annette's Hof cemetery in Paramaribo, his funeral attracted thousands of people and was led by vicar Rudi Polanen of the Moravian Church.[16]

Posthumous

Bronze statue of André Kamperveen at the André Kamperveen Stadion in Paramaribo.

The Kamperveen family have long been involved with the prosecution of Bouterse, working with human rights organization and consulting with the United Nations Human Rights Committee in 1983 along with other victim families.[17] Henk Kamperveen was also involved in the December murders trial that commenced on November 30, 2007. To this date the case has gone unresolved and Dési Bouterse has long denied guilt and only accepted political responsibility for the murders as of 2007.[18]

In 1993, Johnny and Henk returned to Paramaribo to rebuild the ABC Radio station, and after 11 years of absence, the love station was back on air in Suriname. In 2003, Johnny died from a viral infection at his home after years as a host on his fathers station.[19]

In 1988, the National Stadium in Paramaribo was renamed the André Kamperveen Stadion to commemorate the stadiums 35th Anniversary, and on October 1, 2000 a bronze statue of Kamperveen was erected outside the stadium to commemorate the Surinamese Football Association's 80th Anniversary.[20]

References

  1. "Human Rights Committee" (pdf). bayefsky.com. Retrieved 29 February 2012.
  2. "Andres Kamperveen". CONCACAF. 31 August 1990. Retrieved 29 February 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 "Kamperveen, André; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
  4. "André Kamperveen: Suriname's Man of the people". Home of Caribbean Football, The.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Voetbal; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
  6. "Kamperveen hielp Haarlem in laatste minuut aan de zege". Haarlem's Dagblad.
  7. "SK Rapid Wien (Austria) tour of the Americas 1956-57". RSSSF.com.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Basketbal; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
  9. 1 2 3 "Judo; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
  10. 1 2 3 4 "Sportjournalistiek; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
  11. "Biljart; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
  12. "Bally Lochem: belastingman, scheidsrechter en mati van Ampie". Star Nieuws. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  13. "Herinneringen aan Ampie Kamperveen". Trouw. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  14. "Lea Kamperveen over de moord op haar man 'Ampie'". De Volkskrant.
  15. "Bouterse heeft Daal en Rambocus doodgeschoten". Starnieuws (in Dutch). 23 March 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  16. "Eye witness account of survivor Freddy Derby, 18 years later". Waterkant (in Dutch). Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  17. Appendix with Communication No. 148/1983 : Suriname. 04/04/85 of the UN Human Rights Committee, April 4, 1985
  18. "Pijnlijke geschiedenis De decembermoorden in Suriname 'De heer Bouterse lust ik rauw'". De Groene Amsterdamer.
  19. "ABC Suriname - About Us". ABC Suriname.
  20. "Andre Kamperveen Stadion; De eerste Surinaamse sportencyclopedie (1893-1988)". Alberga, Paramaribo, 1990.
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