Maccabiah :The Long Ride to the International Sports Games
Maccabiah :The Long Ride to the International Sports Games
hardback
Published:
1 July, 2025
Description
"This enlightening title is recommended for all." —Association of Jewish Libraries
"Peppy and personable" —Jewish Book Council
In time for the 2025 Maccabiah Games, this picture book biography tells the origin story of the third-largest international sporting event and the unique problem-solving creator Yosef Yekutieli employed to make his dream possible.
In 1912, 15-year-old Yosef Yekutieli listened to radio broadcasts from the Stockholm Olympics and hatched an idea: an Olympic-style competition for Jewish athletes from around the globe in the brand-new city of Tel Aviv.
People initially didn't take him seriously, but that wouldn't stop Yosef. For the next two decades, he worked to make this idea a reality. There was no stadium, pool, or running track anywhere in British Mandate Palestine. But Yosef wasn’t deterred.
There was one big problem left: there was no easy way to tell athletes about the games!
The solution: Motorcycles. Riding thousands of miles, over mountains and through deserts, motorcycle brigades announced the games to the world Jewish community. In 1932, the Maccabiah Games were born.
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781681156958 |
| ISBN10 | 1681156954 |
| Number Of Pages | 32 |
| Item Weight | 1000 g |
| Publisher / Reseller | Behrman House Inc.,U.S. |
| Format | hardback |
Media Reviews
"In 1912 Tel Aviv, 15-year-old Yosef Yekutieli plays soccer with his friends in an empty lot, reads about Jewish athletes from other countries winning Olympic medals in Stockholm, and dreams of an athletic competition for Jews from all over the world. He and his friends laugh at the idea, but he continues thinking about it, gradually solving the problems of holding such a competition in Tel Aviv: paving a running track; building a stadium; making arrangements for swimmers to use Haifa harbor. By 1931, one question remains: how to find and invite Jewish athletes from far-flung communities. The answer? A motorcycle brigade travelling through North Africa and Europe, from Egypt to England, personally inviting athletes and spreading the word through local journalists to build publicity. At the first Maccabiah Games in 1932, 390 athletes represented eighteen different countries.
Maccabiah is told in the first person; Yekutieli narrates the story of his life and how he faced the challenges of establishing such a large international competition. An afterword provides historical details about his life and the 'Maccabiah Games, Then and Now,' including photographs from early and more recent competitions. In a note addressed to the reader, Olitzky and Cohen emphasize Yekutieli’s persistence and ask how the reader shows grit like Yosef, highlighting the links between the Hebrew words hatmada (persistence) and tamid (eternal) and the Eternal Flames of the Maccabiah and Olympic Games and the Eternal Light readers may have seen over the ark at a synagogue.
With explanatory material, vibrant illustrations, and a text that easily leads itself to be read aloud, this book is an ideal introduction to the Games, which will be unfamiliar to many, and the inspiring true story behind them for preschool and early elementary students. The adults in their lives might just learn something new, too. This enlightening title is recommended for all library collections."
—Association of Jewish Libraries
"Combining sports, dreams, grit, and surprises, this delightful picture book delivers the origins of the 'Jewish Olympics,' the Maccabiah Games in Israel. The story reveals the birth of a major international event while underlining the message that one person truly can make a difference. Readers absorb the suspense of waiting for twenty years for an idea to come to fruition.
Yosef Yekutieli, a teenager, listens on the radio to the 1912 Summer Olympics in Sweden; few Jewish athletes compete. He wants Jews from all over to compete in Israel despite the fact there is no country yet (Israel is at that time part of the Ottoman Empire), no facilities, and no organizations to help. Over time, Josef persists despite non-believers. He finds an owner to donate land for the stadium and arranges for the railroad to donate cinders for the track. He assigns swimming to the natural harbors, saving on building a pool.
How can they invite Jewish athletes worldwide? Jews live in countless countries; no one speaks the same language or reads the same newspapers. Few have telephones. The solution: motorcycle riders! These motorcycle riders cross mountains and deserts from Haifa to Belgium, from Egypt to London.
One year later, the first games are held in Tel Aviv. From the tenacity of one man clinging to his teenage dream, we gain the third-largest sporting event in the world: ten thousand Jewish athletes from eighty nations every four years in the country of Israel.
The book is both peppy and personable. Most of the text is dialogue and conversations rather than narrative. The pictures are joyous, active, and focused on appealing individuals. The endnote bursts with information. Readers will be eager to vicariously experience these historical events."
—Jewish Book Council
Author's Bio
Rabbi Kerry Olitzky is the author or coauthor of nearly 100 books for children, adults, and scholars about Jewish and Muslim faith, including Welcome to the Seder: A Passover Haggadah for Everyone; Heroes with Chutzpah (with coauthor Rabbi Deborah Bodin Cohen); and Miryam’s Dance. The former executive director of Big Tent Judaism, he was named one of the fifty leading rabbis in North America by Newsweek. He lives in New Jersey. Rabbi Deborah Bodin Cohen is the award-winning author of many books for children including An Invitation to Passover (with coauthor Rabbi Kerry Olitzky), Nachshon Who Was Afraid to Swim, and the Engineer Ari series, and the coauthor of The Heroes Haggadah (with Rabbi Kerry Olitzky). She is an editor at Behrman House and the rabbi of Congregation Beth Chai. She lives in Rockville, Maryland. André Ceolin is a self-taught illustrator. He started his first attempt at sketching around the age of four when his father brought home some reams of paper from work. It was in that moment that he fell in love with painting and drawing. He studied at School of Visual Arts in NYC, Melies, and Escola Panamericana de Artes to develop a signature look and learned new illustration techniques. He lives in Brazil.