NewsBite

2015 Maccabi Games to be held at the site of the 1936 ‘Nazi Games’

IN A bizarre move, Jewish people will be forced to compete at the site of the 1936 Olympics organised by Hitler and the Nazi Party.

SACRAMENTO, CA - APRIL 3: Fans holds up an Israeli Flag in support of Omri Casspi #18 of the Sacramento Kings from israel during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Arco Arena on April 3, 2010 in Sacramento, California. The Blazers won 98-87. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2010 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images)
SACRAMENTO, CA - APRIL 3: Fans holds up an Israeli Flag in support of Omri Casspi #18 of the Sacramento Kings from israel during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Arco Arena on April 3, 2010 in Sacramento, California. The Blazers won 98-87. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2010 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images)

SEVENTY years after the end of World War II, Berlin will host the European Maccabi Games, dubbed the Jewish Olympics, at the site of the 1936 “Nazi Games”.

“These are the games of reconciliation,” Alon Meyer, president of Maccabi Germany, said of the 10-day event where a record 2,300 athletes from 36 countries will compete in 19 disciplines.

It is the first time Germany will host the Jewish Olympiad, which was launched in 1929 in Prague for European Jews, followed by the first world games held in Tel Aviv in 1932 in what was then British-mandated Palestine.

To be held under tight security, the 14th European Maccabi Games have “strong historical and political significance,” said Chancellor Angela Merkel, who expressed Germany’s “gratitude” for the rebirth of Jewish life in the country responsible for the Holocaust.

After a memorial service on Monday in the former Sachsenhausen concentration camp near the capital, German President Joachim Gauck will on Tuesday kick off the Games before 15,000 spectators at the Waldbuehne, an outdoor amphitheatre near the stadium where Adolf Hitler opened the 1936 Summer Olympics.

The main events will take place in the Berlin Olympic Park built for the Nazi-era Games, where the exclusion of Jewish athletes, which had been a worsening trend for decades amid a tide of anti-Semitism sweeping Europe, reached its peak.

The Maccabi Games are a chance for young and old to come together and celebrate their Jewish heritage.
The Maccabi Games are a chance for young and old to come together and celebrate their Jewish heritage.

The ban on Jews in many sports clubs was at the root of the Maccabi movement founded in the late 19th century, said Oren Osterer, a former basketball player and head of the organisation of these Games.

Inspired by the Zionist movement, Maccabi was born as a quest for the “muscular Jew”, said Alon Meyer. He also pointed to an egalitarian spirit that values juniors, seniors and veterans, not just top performers.

It also includes disciplines far removed from classic Olympic sports. Besides basketball, football, tennis, swimming and fencing, the Maccabi Games offers bowling competitions, chess and bridge — “the sport of Jewish grandmas”, joked Osterer.

Off the field, the Games will also try to establish “a non-sports record” by throwing a Shabbat party that aims to be even bigger than a record-setting get-together last year in Tel Aviv.

Fifty years after then-West Germany and Israel established diplomatic relations, the competition also marks the reassertion of the German Jewish community, whose identity remains troubled by the memory of the Holocaust.

Germany’s Jewish community, which had been decimated to a few thousands after WWII, has grown again to some 240,000.

Before the 2011 European Games in Vienna, “nobody wanted to compete as a German” at the Maccabi Games. The German delegation previously would march under the colours of Israel, rather than Germany’s black-red-gold national flag, recalled Meyer.

“Some have doubted it is fair to bring the Games to Berlin while there are still Holocaust survivors,” he said. “But we are a new generation...and the question of guilt has been resolved for a long time.”

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/sport/breaking-news/2015-maccabi-games-to-be-held-at-the-site-of-the-1936-nazi-games/news-story/d310f8d24434db898f4f7843e7b9b3fe