In Jewish Sports Legends, Joseph Siegman profiles some of the world’s greatest athletes. Each of these athletes and contributors is honored as a member of the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. The IJSHOF dates to 1977, when a group of athletes returning from the 10th Maccabiah games, held in Israel a scant five years after the murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympiad, sought a way to honor outstanding achievement and lay to rest the canard that Jews do not excel in physical activities.
The breadth of sports cited, and the long history of Jewish involvement in a variety of roles — athlete, coach, administrator, writer and broadcaster — reveals the influence exerted by these legendary sports personalities. Most of these names will be familiar to the sports fan, especially in sports offering professional opportunities or Olympics exposure, but there are many unfamiliar names, as well, particularly among the Europeans who excelled in fencing, soccer, table tennis and even track and field.
A vast emptiness is revealed when the reader remembers the years of the Holocaust and thinks about how many athletes lost their opportunity to excel, and often their lives. For American athletes, this book offers a sociological mirror reflecting through sports a changing social acceptance of Jews, their improved economic status and the shift of populations from the city to the suburbs, from the East coast to the West. Suddenly, after mid-20th century, the pipeline that produced Jewish boxers and jockeys is capped, replaced by an endless supply of Jewish tennis players, golfers and figure skaters.
Part of the fun of such a compilation is being able to argue about who was omitted, and why. Nancy Lieberman, the great basketball player, does not appear, nor does Bernard “Red” Sarachek, the legendary basketball coach. But what is so impressive about Siegman’s book is how few bona fide sports legends are absent. Jack Molinas, for example, did not “make the cut,” probably because of his non-basketball activities and the circumstances of his death, but otherwise, all the usual suspects appear, and they are described in brief, informative ways. There is even some unfamiliar information, such as the profile of Otto Herschmann, the great Austrian-Jewish swimmer who is the answer to a trivia question: Which (Jewish) athlete was the first to win Olympic medals in two different sports? As Casey Stengel said, “You could look it up.”
Give this book to a Jewish teenager who loves sports. Or just put it on your coffee table. It is worth perusing.