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The Olympics And The Holocaust
Their participation in the Games
did not spare these athletes from Shoah horrors.
Steve Lipman - Staff Writer
The Jewish Week, 12 August
2004
The Jewish connection to the
Olympic Games is as old as the modern Olympics movement.
Unfortunately, some of the connections are tragic, like
the murder of 11 members of Israel's team at the Munich
Games in 1972.
Last week The Jewish Week looked
at some largely unknown parts of Olympic Jewish history.
This week, the Olympics and the Holocaust.
According to lore, Ben Bril was
the youngest boxer ever in the Olympics - he was 15
in Amsterdam in 1928. A 12-time Dutch champion, he boycotted
the 1936 Summer Games in Berlin, the so-called Nazi
Olympics. He and his wife were incarcerated at Bergen-Belsen
during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands; both
survived. During a second career as a boxing referee,
he worked at the Olympic matches of such fighters as
Joe Frazier and George Foreman. Witnesses say he would
enter the ring for a fight with his hair neatly combed,
and "always came out the same way - untouched.
For him, technique always came first."
Sybil Cooper won seven gold medals
in track and field during the first two Maccabiah Games
in Palestine. How many Olympic medals she might have
won in the Games for which she qualified is conjecture.
Cooper, a world-class hurdler, joined a Jewish boycott
of the '36 Games in Berlin, and the 1940 event in Helsinki
was canceled by fighting in Europe.
During her prime, Cooper defeated
such outstanding athletes as Stella Walsh and Babe Didrickson.
After her track career was over, she lived on the Lower
East Side and worked as an artist in Greenwich Village.
Blond, blue-eyed Bernd Stevens
qualified in 1935, at 16, as an alternate for the German
Olympic ski team that would participate the next year
in the Olympics. But Stevens was Jewish; he was off
the team. After the Games, after Kristallnacht, his
father and brother were taken to concentration camps.
Stevens, with false papers, made his way to the United
States. He joined the Army to "save whatever Jews
could still be saved," was recruited by the forerunner
of the CIA, and became a parachutist. Later he became
a CPA. Stevens entered competitive giant slalom events
until he was 74.
The 1928 Netherlands women's gymnastics
squad that won medals for all-around team performance
had a strong Jewish flavor - five members were Jewish.
Four later died in the Holocaust. Stella Blits-Agsteribbe
perished in Auschwitz. Three of her teammates lost their
lives in Sobibor: Anna Dresden-Polak, Lea Kloot-Nordheim
and Judikje Themans-Simons. In addition, the team's
coach, Gerritt Kleerekoper, was also murdered in Sobibor.
Only one member of the team survived the Holocaust -
Elka de Levie died in Amsterdam at 74.
Attila Petschauer, a Hungarian
fencer, won three Olympic medals during the Summer Games
of 1928 and 1932. During the Holocaust he was deported
to a Nazi labor camp in Ukraine, where he was recognized
by a Nazi officer who had been an equestrian competitor
on Hungary's '28 Olympic team. The two had been friends,
but in the camp, the officer ordered guards to taunt
Petschauer.
"You, Olympic fencing medal
winner … let's see how you can climb trees," the
guards would yell. In midwinter, he was forced to climb
a tree naked and crow like a rooster. The guards sprayed
him with water. He died from exposure on Jan. 20, 1943.
Several other Jewish Olympians
are known to have died in the Shoah. Among them are
Alfred Flatow and his cousin Gustav Felix Flatow, German
gymnasts; Ilja Szrajbman, a Polish swimmer; Janos Garay,
Oskar Gerde and Endre Kabos, Hungarian fencers; Roman
Kantor, a Polish fencer; and Otto Herschmann, an Austrian
swimmer.
And one more victim, Dr. Ferenc
Kemeny of Hungary, a supporter in 1896 of Pierre de
Coubertin's nascent Olympic movement, committed suicide
with his wife during the Nazi occupation of his homeland
rather than wear the yellow star.
By traditional Jewish standards, Helene Mayer was not
Jewish - only her father was a Jew. But to the Nazis,
she was Jewish enough for their public relations purposes.
Mayer, a championship fencer who won an Olympic gold
medal in 1928, stayed in the United States to study
after taking part in the 1932 Summer Games in Los Angeles.
Facing an American boycott of the '36 Games in Berlin
because of anti-Jewish discrimination, Germany invited
- actually pressured - Mayer to join its national team.
She did and won a silver medal in Berlin. Mayer moved
back to the U.S. before World War II. As an American
citizen she won the national foil championship eight
times.
The German Olympic team at the
1936 Winter Games in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria,
already under Nazi aegis, was not entirely judenfrei
- it had Rudi Ball. Ball, a star forward on Germany's
two-time world championship and 1932 Olympic bronze
medal ice hockey team, was invited back from France,
where he had gone on voluntary exile, to play on his
homeland's '36 team. Ball, Germany's best player, was
injured during a game against Hungary and Germany finished
fifth. After the war, he moved to South Africa.
1936 was the Nazis' Olympic
year.
Along with those Winter Games
in Bavaria, the Summer Games were in Berlin. To fend
off accusations of anti-Semitic persecution, the Germans
removed some discriminatory signs from cities where
reporters were sure to roam and allowed token Jewish
representation on the otherwise Aryan squads. Nevertheless,
there were calls to boycott the Games.
The Maccabi movement, which had
held a winter competition in Poland in 1933, held its
second Macabiah Winter Games in 1936 in Banska Bystrica,
Czechoslovakia. The competition, billed in some circles
as the First International Jewish Winter Olympics, was
intended to serve as an alternative Games for Jewish
athletes. Participants in the Czech event included hockey
player Fritz Hirschberger, German-born son of a Christian
mother and Jewish father, who settled in the U.S. and
became a political organizer and artist.
Rain spoiled most of the competition,
making the skating rink unusable, canceling the speed
skating and figure skating events, and forcing the abandonment
of the ice hockey tournament.
A wider-scale counter Summer Games
were to be held in Spain, but the Spanish Civil War
derailed that. In its place, a two-day World Labor Athletic
Carnival was staged in August in the newly opened Municipal
Stadium of Randall's Island. Some 400 athletes, mostly
from the U.S., took part in the competition sponsored
by the Jewish Labor Committee.
Individual Jewish athletes faced
the decision whether they should boycott the Berlin
Games as a form of protest. Two outstanding sportsmen
who stayed away from Berlin were Harvard track and field
stars Milton Green and Norman Cahners, and Syd Koff
(nee Sybil Tabachnikoff), a championship sprinter and
jumper from the Lower East Side.
In the end, several Jewish men
and women did compete at Berlin, intending their presence
as a message against Nazi propaganda, and a dozen won
medals.
Only two Jewish athletes, as far
as is known, competed in the Olympics after surviving
the Holocaust. They are Alfred Nakache, a French swimmer
and water polo player, and Ben Helfgott, a British weightlifter.
Nakache, the French 100-meter freestyle champion, was
on his country's squad in Berlin in 1936. Twelve years
later, after Auschwitz, where his wife and daughter
perished, he took part in London but did not win a medal.
Helfgott, the only member of his
family who survived Buchenwald, moved to England after
World War II. He captained the British weightlifting
teams as Melbourne in 1956 and Rome in 1960. Helfgott
was active in England assisting Holocaust survivors
and chaired the Yad Vashem Committee of the Board of
Deputies of British Jews.
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