Germans Restore 1936 High Jump Record

Germans Restore 1936 High Jump Record

NEW YORK – Gretel Bergmann matched a German high jump record on June 30, 1936.
Two weeks later, the 5 feet, 3 inches she jumped in Stuttgart, Germany, was all but obliterated and she was kicked off the team.
Bergmann was Jewish. She would miss that year's Berlin Olympics. There was no way the Nazis would allow a Jew to compete and possibly win.

Now comes news that Germany's track and field association restored the mark, calling the decision an "act of justice and a symbolic gesture" while acknowledging it "can in no way make up" for the past. It also requested that she be included in Germany's sports hall of fame.
This was all a pleasant surprise for the 95-year-old Bergmann — a victory for the strong-willed woman who later changed her name to Margaret Lambert after emigrating to the United States in 1937.
"That's very nice and I appreciate it. I couldn't repeat the jump today. Believe me," said Lambert, who lives in the New York City borough of Queens.
Lambert, interviewed by telephone, said she was on the German Olympic team from 1934 to 1936 but had gone to England at the age of 19 in search of schooling. She won the 1934 British High Jump Championships and had hoped to compete for Britain. But the Nazis learned of her success.
She said they forced her to jump for Germany, threatening her family even though Lambert figured the Nazis would never let her partake in the Olympics. It was a political stunt meant to appease the Americans.
She found the Jews living in horrible conditions upon her return to Germany.
"Jews were not allowed in restaurants, in movies, in whatever," she told the U.S Holocaust Memorial Museum. "And even though I was a member of the German Olympic women's team, I was not allowed in a stadium. I couldn't practice."
Lambert said the treatment of the Jews angered her and made her compete harder.
"The madder I got the better I did," she recalled.
Lambert said she was initially unaware that her record was stripped because she was trying to carve out a new life in America.
"I didn't even know about it," she said. "I was so busy trying to survive over here."
Lambert, who has been married for 71 years, made a living as a cleaning woman for $10 a week and then a physical therapist. A Yankees fan, she gave up working to raise two sons. She still has pictures, medals and other memorabilia from her days as a star athlete, noting that she also competed in shot put.
She can't even bring herself to watch the Olympics these days.
"To tell the truth, I used to sit there and curse my head off when the Olympics were going on," she said. "Now I don't do that anymore. I've mellowed quite a bit."
Lambert said she lost many relatives in the Holocaust, including her mother-in-law and brother-in-law. She has gone back to Germany, though reluctantly.
"I went back twice, even though I swore I'd never touch German soil again. I decided I shouldn't blame the younger German generation for what their fathers and grandfathers did."

 

Originally from here

Picture from here

Posted on Shalom Adventure by: Jeff Zaremsky

Related Articles

More From Shoah

Buchenwald

Buchenwald was liberated by the US Third Army on April 11, 1945 at 3:15pm.
Buchenwald

Syndrome K

In the fall of 1943, German soldiers in Italy began rounding up Italian Jews and deporting…
Syndrome K

The Jews in Poland

The Jews had established a physical presence in Poland back to the days of the first century,…
The Jews in Poland

Whose Child are You?

Holocaust survivor Josef Herschel tells of the horrific events of World War II and how his…
Whose Child are You?

My Father's Holocaust Secret

When holocaust survivor Aryeh Goldberg passed away he left his son Tzachi his gold Phillippe…
My Father's Holocaust Secret

Holocaust in North Africa

This is a forgotten tragedy. It was part of the Holocaust, but it didn’t occur in Europe…
Holocaust in North Africa

The Perfect Aryan Baby

The "perfect Aryan baby", as chosen by the Nazis themselves in the 30s, was a sweet little…
The Perfect Aryan Baby
Photo of a Box Car on exhibit at Yad Vashem

Box Car

How did the Nazis transport people to the death camps? They used railroad Box Cars, which were…
Box Car
Holocaust Remembrance Day

Holocaust Remembrance Day

Israel became a nation after the horrors done to the Jewish people during the Holocaust.
Holocaust Remembrance Day

The Jewish Ghettos of World War II

The ghettos of World War II were established by the Nazis to create a total confinement for the…
The Jewish Ghettos of World War II

Publish the Menu module to "offcanvas" position. Here you can publish other modules as well.
Learn More.


donation