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Extraordinary life of Olympic champion Agnes Keleti told at Jewish family history conference

The International Conference on Jewish Genealogy is taking place in London

August 4, 2023 12:17
Agnes Keleti
Picture taken on January 8, 2023 shows Hungarian-Israeli retired Olympic and world champion artistic gymnast and coach Agnes Keleti posing for a picture as she prepares for her 102nd birthday in her flat in Budapest, Hungary. - Agnes Keleti, a survivor of the Holocaust, was born on January 9, 1921, immigrated to Israel in the 1950ies and returned to Hungary in 2015. During her career as a gymnast, she won 10 Olympic medals in Helsinki (1952) and in Melbourne (1956) and is considered to be the world's oldest living Olympic athlete. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP) (Photo by ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP via Getty Images)
2 min read

The powerful and inspiring story of 102-year-old Agnes Keleti, one of the most successful female Jewish Olympians of all time, was told by her cousin’s daughter during an international conference on tracing Jewish family history held in London this week.

Judi Gyory Missel described how Keleti, despite becoming Hungarian national champion at 16, was repeatedly denied the opportunity to compete internationally because she was born Jewish.

Through “sheer force of will” she overcame the numerous anti-Jewish laws of late 1930s Hungary, where 70 per cent of Jews were eventually murdered, including her father.

She went on to compete in the 1952 and 1956 Summer Olympics and in the latter became the most successful athlete to participate — and all after the age of 30. She had children in her early forties and settled in Israel and coached the country’s national gymnastics team well into the 1990s.