Anti-Semitism in American Sports
Rabbi Melanie Aron
Saturday, October 11, 2003
Before the High Holidays, I do a lot of reading. Partly it's
research, looking for ideas and stories, and partly it's
procrastination. I'll read almost anything, rather than actually
sitting down to write.
That's how I came to read Frederic Cople Jaher's article
"Anti-Semiticism in American Sports" (Shofar Fall 2001 Vol 20 No.
1) pp 61- 73.
Given Jared's interests (and the Cantor's enthusiasm for the
Chicago Cubs) I thought this might make an interesting subject
for a few remarks this morning.
Ideally the world of athletic competition is the proverbial level
playing field, where every athlete is judged fairly and excels
according to his or her ability. Sports has been for some a way
to make it in American society. But we also know, especially
from the experiences of African Americans, that there has been
exclusion and prejudice, with continuing reverberations up to and
including the recent incident with Rush Limbaugh.
When I was a child the joke was -- oh, you are writing a book
about Outstanding Jews in Sports? That will be a slim volume!
But actually Jaher points out that Jews have been involved in a
variety of sports, in numbers that exceed the percentage of Jews
in the general population, since the period that followed the
civil war. There is a long history of Jewish involvement in
college and professional sports, particularly in boxing, baseball
and basketball, not only as players but also as managers, coaches
and owners.
Though prejudice against Jews in sports existed, particularly
from the 1880's through the 1940's, present discrimination and
exclusion were less in sports than in elite schools, country
clubs, employment or certain neighborhoods. Sports being less
respectable than corporate officialdom made it more open to
immigrants and their children. As football is sometimes touted
today as the route from poverty to respectability, from the slum
to success, for African Americans, boxing played that role for
Jewish immigrants at the turn of the century. In general, the
higher the status of the sport, as in golf, tennis and yachting
the more exclusion. In general, also, there was almost no
prejudice against Jews in America's early days, but prejudice
increased in the 1880's and continued through World War II. Thus
in 1866 the American Jockey Club was founded by a Jew, but by the
end of the century, no Jews were allowed to belong. Similarly
the New York Athletic Club had Jewish members in the 1870's, but
by the 1930's even an Olympic contender, a relay runner who was
Jewish, was not allowed to come in with a friend and train. As
late as the 1970's a Jewish squash player dropped out of the
competition, when he discovered that Chicago's 5 squash clubs,
with their combined membership of 7,000 individuals included only
1 Jew. It was easier for Jews to participate in more popular
sports, but there particularly in boxing and baseball, they were
more likely to encounter taunts and anti-Jewish remarks. Some of
you may remember Hank Greenberg's career and the hazing he
experienced.
Still prejudice in the sports world tended to be less severe than
in American society as a whole. In the 1920's when Ivy League
schools introduced Jewish quotas, there were still Jewish
captains of the football teams at Harvard, Brown, the University
of Chicago and the University of Michigan. A major survey of
Americans in 1949 found that while 14% of Americans at that time
preferred not to work next to a Jew and 22% preferred not to have
a Jew as a neighbor, 93% felt it wouldn't matter if 6 of 11
starters on a college football team were Jewish.
Jews played a significant role in the integration of African
Americans into college and professional sports. The author of
this article holds that it is not a coincidence that the first
African American to play professional baseball played for the
Brooklyn Dodgers. Yahr describes the anti-Semitic hate mail that
Howard Cossell (born Howard Cohen) received for his defense of
Mohammed Ali and his willingness to call him by that name rather
than Cassius Clay. Jews also played a role in Joe Louis being
able to break the color line as heavy weight champion in 1937.
Finally, I found the story of the Berlin Olympics of 1936
fascinating. Though surveys of the time showed that 43% of all
Americans, and not just Jews, thought America should refuse to
participate in the games, and a movement against the Olympics was
led by 5 governors, 5 senators, and a variety of civic leaders;
those in favor of having the games in Nazi Germany, accused
American Jews of using "bribery, corruption, political trickery
and other contemptible tactics" in their efforts to mobilize
public opinion against participating. Avery Brundage, then
president of the American Olympic Committee, praised Hitler's
government, and questioned the patriotism of American Jews who he
accused of being communists and radicals. He spoke at Bund
rallies and still in 1939 was accusing the Jews of poisoning
American attitudes against Germany. A club which he owned in
Santa Barbara excluded Jews and Blacks throughout the late
1960's.
The history of Anti-Semitism in American sports also includes
more positive episodes. The stories of players who did not play
on Yom Kippur are legend and these players become models for
younger generations. Less well know is the story of the one
early baseball player named Cohen who continued to use his name -
while 7 other Jewish players born with the last name Cohen chose
names that were less revealing of their religion of ethnicity.
Jared, as you go off to sporting competitions around the state
and around the region, I hope you go forth with pride in your
heritage and with a basis upon which to build your adult Jewish
identity. Now that the pressure of the last minute preparations
for your Bar Mitzvah are concluded, we look forward to your
return to our Tuesday night program. Maybe with the Cantor's
help, we'll convince Rabbi Rosenberg to offer a class on Jews in
Sports.