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London Olympics: Bombay boxers and Hebrew basketball players

August 2, 2012 15:06

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

2 min read

Next to the JC's report of French Jewish athlete Micheline Ostermeyer's successes in the 1948 Games, there was a "missing relatives" column. The missing aunts, husbands, friends, came from Warsaw and Riga, Odessa and Lvov. "Last heard from in 1932," read one.

Staged three years after the Holocaust, the Games were a new dawn for the Jew as champion in a more tolerant world. "I found no trace of prejudice," said Chilean fencer Isaac Goldstein. "We were all sportsmen… the atmosphere was fine."

As the JC acknowledged in an editorial, "for too long" the Jews had been seen as "a 'bookish' people, either unable or unwilling to face competition in hardier activities". The Games were an opportunity to challenge that, not least for athletes who had survived Nazi persecution, like Fred Oberlander, who had refused to represent Austria at the Berlin Games of 1936, but who competed for Britain in 1948. Berlin-born racewalker Henry Laskau, who fled his home country on the eve of the Holocaust, competed under the US flag, while survivor Susy Halter swam for Hungary at the age of 19.

In total, 70 Jews, representing 20 nations, went for gold, among them British swimmer Roy Romain and British basketball player Lionel Price, along with six of Canada's basketball team, dispatched from the Montreal Young Men's Hebrew Association. Many departed with medals, including Hungarian Ilona Elek - then 41 - who won gold for fencing, repeating her triumph at the 1936 Games.

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