1993 Maccabiah Games

The 1993 Maccabiah Games was the 14th installment of the Maccabiah Games and brought 5,100 athletes to Israel from 48 nations.

14th Maccabiah
Nations participating48
Debuting countries Belarus
 Croatia
 Georgia
 Portugal
 Samoa
 Ukraine
Athletes participating5100
Opening cityRamat Gan
Officially opened byYael Arad
Main venueNational Stadium

Jewish athletes from Poland, Bulgaria, and Czechoslovakia participated for the first time after World War II, after the fall of the Iron Curtain. Athletes from the eight Republics of the former Soviet Union also participated.

History

The Maccabiah Games were first held in 1932.[1] In 1961, they were declared a "Regional Sports Event" by, and under the auspices and supervision of, the International Olympic Committee.[2][3][4]

Opening ceremonies

A giant torch has been fixed in the National Stadium for this games and on.

Yael Arad, who had won a silver medal for Israel in judo at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992, lit the Maccabiah torch.

Participating communities

The number in parentheses indicates the number of participants that community contributed.

gollark: Being highly efficient, everyone just put in increasing values until a composite number came out.
gollark: Once in a maths lesson we were doing (dis)proof by counterexample and got the traditional x²+x+41 thing.
gollark: Idea: brute force longer sequences like that.
gollark: (The orbital laser represents exhaustive enumeration of all possible proofs of a chosen statement)
gollark: GTech™: orbital laser strike inbound.

References

  1. "The 20th Maccabiah Games: A brief History (Part 1)," The Canadian Jewish News.
  2. Helen Jefferson Lenskyj (2012). Gender Politics and the Olympic Industry. Palgrave Macmillan.
  3. Mitchell G. Bard and Moshe Schwartz (2005). 1001 Facts Everyone Should Know about Israel p. 84.
  4. "History of the Maccabiah Games". Maccabi Australia.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.