Two of the best boxers in the world are Orthodox Jews. One
of them is an Israeli citizen and the other is married to an Israeli.
On November 12, Israeli citizen Yuri Foreman beat his
opponent, Javier “Pelon” Gomez with a flurry of punches and a resounding
first-round knock-out in a middleweight bout in Florida.
It was the fourth
victory in as many fights in 2013 for the rabbinical student at a Brooklyn, New
York yeshiva. Foreman’s career professional boxing record is 32 wins, two
losses and one no contest, with nine knockouts.
On November 9, Dmitriy “Star of David” Salita, a follower of
Chabad Hasidism, met his match when he lost a 10-round welterweight fight in
Brooklyn to Gabriel “Tito” Bracero. The fight was pretty even through the first
eight rounds before Bracero took control, giving Salita a couple of cuts and
earning the unanimous decision of the three judges.
Bracero’s career pro record is 23 wins (four by knockout)
and one loss. Salita’s record now stands at 35 wins (18 knockouts), two losses
and one tie.
Salita’s wife is an Israeli citizen. The couple may move to
Israel when he retires. Salita is also involved in promoting other boxers.
Foreman began boxing as a young boy in Belarus, because of
the anti-Semitism he experienced there, and he continued to box after
immigrating to Israel with his family. He enrolled in his Brooklyn yeshiva
after deciding to become a rabbi.
Salita’s family moved from the Ukraine to the United States
to escape the anti-Semitism they faced in Odessa. Salita began boxing after
being bullied by other children.
When Salita was a high-school student, in Brooklyn, his
mother became ill with the breast cancer that eventually killed her.
Salita
would run in the morning, go to classes, train at his gym and then spend the
nights with his mother at the hospital. It was at around that time that Salita
became involved in the Chabad movement. He has said that his rabbi gave him a
lot of moral support. As a tribute to his mother, Salita, whose last name is
Lekhtman, uses her maiden name as his professional name.
Besides Foreman, other currently active Israeli boxers
include cruiserweight Ran Nakash, who boasts a 26-1 record with 18 knockouts,
and Hagar Finer, the Women’s International Boxing Federation bantamweight
champion.
Roman Greenberg, who like Salita and Foreman was born in the
former Soviet Union and has fought with a Star of David on his shorts,
immigrated to Israel with his family as an infant. He had a 27-1 record (18
knock-outs). Greenberg was International Boxing Organization heavyweight
intercontinental champion from March 2006-August 2008.
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