Orthodox Jewish Runner Aiming for Tokyo Pleads With Olympic Committee Not to Hold Marathon on Shabbat
Error: Contact form not found.
by Algemeiner Staff

Israeli marathon runner Bracha ‘Beatie’ Deutsch. Photo: Facebook.
An Orthodox Jewish woman who hopes to represent Israel at the Olympic Games in Tokyo next year is trying to persuade International Olympic Association not to hold a key athletic event on Shabbat.
In an interview on Monday with the UK paper The Telegraph, New Jersey-born Bracha “Beatie” Deutsch — a champion marathon runner, mother of five children and resident of Jerusalem — explained that there were two conditions on her participation at the Games, only one of which was within her control.
As a marathon runner, Deutsch is within touching distance of the qualification standard for Tokyo of 2 hr 29 min 30 sec, having clocked in at 2 hr 32 min in January’s marathon in Jerusalem. But a bigger hurdle is the decision of Games’ organizers to hold the marathon on a Saturday.
“When I set myself the goal of representing Israel in the Olympics, the marathon was on a Sunday,” the 28-year-old Deutsch told the newspaper. “They then moved all the outdoor distance events to Sapporo and condensed them into four days. The women’s marathon is on Shabbat.”
Deutsch’s attempts to overturn the International Olympic Committee’s decision have fallen flat, despite hoping there might be room for negotiation now the Games have been postponed until 2021.
“I wrote to them to see if there was a possibility of switching the marathon with the race walk [on Friday],” she said. “So far, they’ve not been very receptive.”
Deutsch, who immigated to Israel from the US at the age of 19, said that the Olympic authorities needed to show more cultural sensitivity.
“I don’t think the world needs to bend over backwards for me because I have my religious values, but the Olympics is meant to be a unifying event for people from all types of backgrounds ‐‐ it’s about diversity,” she remarked. “In a time when everyone is trying to be more accepting and accommodating of gender, race ‐‐ everything ‐‐ I feel like they should be more tolerant.”
An International Olympic Committee spokesperson told The Telegraph: “While we put athlete considerations first in all decisions, particularly health and welfare, we are unfortunately not able to adjust the schedule to the particular situation of each individual athlete.”
The Incredible Jewish History of Rome (PART TWO)
Students Supporting Israel Launch Fall Tour to Promote Black, Ethiopian, Jewish Unity
Trump Says He Has Been ‘Best President’ For Israel, Questions Why Jews Vote Democrat
Majority of American Jews Still Hiding Identity to Avoid Hate Crime, New Survey Reports
Harvard Faculty Pen Letter Detailing Ongoing Antisemitism Crisis On Campus Amid White House Investigation
A New Book Reveals Perhaps the Most Important Lesson of October 7
California Jews Bear Disproportionate Share of Religion-Based Hate Crimes, New State Report Finds
Azerbaijani Jewish Leaders Urge Israel to Halt Armenian Genocide Bill Amid Fears of Strained Baku-Jerusalem Ties
How Latin America’s Political Realignment Is Shaping Israel’s Future
Ahead of the 2028 Presidential Election, Competing Worldviews on Iran Will Be on Full Display





The Incredible Jewish History of Rome (PART TWO)



