The Nazi Olympics
(August 1936)
For two weeks in August 1936, Adolf
Hitler's Nazi
dictatorship camouflaged its racist, militaristic character while
hosting the Summer Olympics. Soft-pedaling its antisemitic agenda and
plans for territorial expansion, the regime exploited the Games to
bedazzle many foreign spectators and journalists with an image of a
peaceful, tolerant Germany.
Having rejected a proposed
boycott of the 1936 Olympics, the United States
and other western democracies missed the opportunity
to take a stand that — some observers
at the time claimed — might have given Hitler pause and bolstered international resistance
to Nazi tyranny. With the conclusion of the
Games, Germany's expansionist policies and
the persecution of Jews and other
“enemies of the state” accelerated,
culminating in World
War II and the Holocaust.
Germany From 1933 to 1936
On May 13, 1931, the International Olympic
Committee, headed by Count Henri Baillet-Latour of Belgium, awarded
the 1936 Summer Olympics to Berlin. The choice signaled Germany's
return to the world community after defeat in World War I.
Two years later, Nazi
Party leader Adolf
Hitler became chancellor of Germany and quickly turned the nation's fragile
democracy into a one-party dictatorship. Police rounded up thousands
of political opponents, detaining them without trial in concentration
camps. The Nazi regime also put into practice racial policies that
aimed to “purify” and strengthen the Germanic
“Aryan” population. A relentless campaign began to exclude
Germany’s one-half million Jews from all aspects of German life.
Nazification of Sport
The Nazification of all aspects of German life
extended even to sport. A staunch Nazi close to Hitler, Hans
von Tschammer und Osten, headed the Reich Sports Office, which oversaw
all sports bodies and clubs, including the German Olympic Committee
planning the 1936 Games.
“German sport has
only one task: to strengthen the character
of the German people, imbuing it with the
fighting spirit and steadfast camaraderie necessary
in the struggle for its existence.” — Joseph
Goebbels, Minister of Propaganda, April 23,
1933
The government harnessed sport
as part of its drive to strengthen the “Aryan
race,” to exercise political control over its
citizens, and to prepare German youth for war.
“Non-Aryans” — Jewish or part-Jewish
and Gypsy athletes — were systematically excluded
from German sports facilities and associations.
They were allowed marginal training facilities,
and their opportunities to compete were limited.
Indoctrination
German sports imagery in the 1930s promoted the
myth of Aryan racial superiority and physical power. Artists
idealized athletes' well-developed muscle tone and heroic strength
and accentuated so-called Aryan facial features — blue eyes and
blond hair. Such imagery also reflected the importance the Nazi
regime placed on physical fitness.
Hitler initially held the Olympics in low regard
because of their internationalism, but he became an avid supporter
after Joseph
Goebbels, his Minister of Propaganda, convinced him of
their propaganda value. The regime provided full financial support
for the event, 20,000,000 Reichsmarks ($8,000,000).
Exclusion of Jews
Soon after Hitler took power, the drive began to
exclude Jews from German sport and recreational facilities. The
German Boxing Association expelled amateur champion Eric Seelig in
April 1933 because he was Jewish. Seelig later resumed his boxing
career in the United States. Another Jew, Daniel Prenn, Germany's
top-ranked tennis player, was removed from Germany's Davis Cup Team.
Gypsies, including the Sinti boxer Johann “Rukelie”
Trollmann, were also purged from German sports. In June 1933,
Trollman, the German middleweight boxing champion, was banned from
boxing for “racial reasons.”
Jewish athletes, barred from German sports clubs,
flocked to separate Jewish associations, but Jewish sports facilities
were no match for those of the well-funded German groups. Gretel
Bergmann was a world-class high jumper who was expelled from her
sports club in Ulm in 1933. Afterwards, she trained briefly with the
Stuttgart branch of Der Schild (The Shield), a sports association
organized under the auspices of the Jewish Association of War
Veterans.
Deciding Whether to Boycott
Soon after Hitler took power in 1933, observers in
the United States and other western democracies questioned the
morality of supporting Olympic Games hosted by the Nazi regime.
Responding to reports of the persecution of Jewish athletes in 1933,
Avery Brundage, president of the American Olympic Committee, stated:
“The very foundation of the modern Olympic revival will be
undermined if individual countries are allowed to restrict
participation by reason of class, creed, or race.” Brundage,
like many others in the Olympics movement, initially considered
moving the Games from Germany. After a brief and tightly managed
inspection of German sports facilities in 1934, Brundage stated
publicly that Jewish athletes were being treated fairly and that the
Games should go on, as planned.
Debate over participation in the 1936 Olympics was
greatest in the United States, which traditionally sent one of the
largest teams to the Games. By the end of 1934, the lines on both
sides were clearly drawn. Brundage opposed a boycott, arguing that
politics had no place in sport. “The Olympic Games belong to the
athletes and not to the politicians.” He wrote in the AOC's
pamphlet Fair Play for American Athletes that American athletes
should not become involved in “the present Jew-Nazi
altercation.” As the Olympics controversy heated up in 1935,
Brundage alleged the existence of a “Jewish-Communist
conspiracy” to keep the United States out of the Games.
Brundage's rival, Judge Jeremiah Mahoney,
president of the Amateur Athletic Union, pointed out that Germany had
broken Olympic rules forbidding discrimination based on race and
religion. In his view, participation would mean an endorsement of
Hitler's Reich.
Judge Mahoney was one of a number of Catholic
leaders supporting a boycott. Al Smith, governor of New York, and
James Curley, governor of Massachusetts, also opposed sending a team
to Berlin. The Catholic journal The Commonweal (November 8,
1935) advised boycotting an Olympics that would “set the seal of
approval upon the radically anti-Christian Nazi doctrine of
youth.”
Beginning in 1933, the American Jewish Congress
and the Jewish Labor Committee, joined by the non-sectarian Anti-Nazi
League, staged mass rallies to protest Nazi persecution of Jews,
political opponents, and others. These groups supported the boycott
of the 1936 Games as part of a general boycott of German goods. Other
Jewish groups, such as the American Jewish Committee and B'nai B'rith,
did not formally support a boycott, in part because they feared that
such a posture might trigger an antisemitic backlash in both the
United States and Germany.
Individual Jewish athletes made their own
decisions. For example, Milton Green, captain of the Harvard
University track team, took first place in the 110-meter high hurdles
in regional pre-Olympic trials. His teammate, Norman Cahners, also
Jewish, qualified for the final Olympics trials as well. Both chose
to boycott the national Olympic trials.
Many of the liberal and left-wing political groups
that denounced Hitler's fascist dictatorship linked their opposition
to the Berlin Olympics with the wider economic boycott of Germany.
Blacks Battle Hypocrisy
After concerns about the safety of Black athletes
in Nazi Germany were put to rest by the International Olympic
Committee, most African American newspapers opposed a boycott of the
1936 Olympics. Black journalists often underscored the hypocrisy of
pro-boycotters who did not first address the problem of
discrimination against Black athletes in the United States. Writers
for such papers as The Philadelphia Tribune and The Chicago
Defender argued that athletic victories by Blacks would undermine
Nazi racial views of “Aryan” supremacy and foster a new
sense of Black pride at home.
In the end, 18 African Americans — 16 men and 2
women — went to Berlin, triple the number who had competed for the
United States in the 1932 Los Angeles Games. That all of these
athletes came from predominantly white universities demonstrated to
many Black journalists the inferiority of training equipment and
facilities at black colleges where the vast majority of African
American students were educated in the 1930s.
IOC Accepts No Dissent
“Neither Americans nor the representatives
of other countries can take part in the Games in Nazi Germany
without at least acquiescing in the contempt of the Nazis for fair
play and their sordid exploitation of the Games.” — Ernest Lee
Jahncke, American member of the IOC, in a letter to Count Henri
Baillet-Latour, President IOC, November 25, 1935
Ernest Lee Jahncke, a former assistant secretary
of the Navy, of German Protestant descent, was expelled from the
International Olympic Committee (IOC) in July 1936 after taking a
strong public stand against the Berlin Games. The IOC pointedly
elected Avery Brundage to fill Jahncke's seat. Jahncke is the only
member in the 100-year history of the IOC to be ejected.
World Response
Short-lived boycott efforts surfaced in Great
Britain, France, Sweden, Czechoslovakia, and the Netherlands. German
Socialists and Communists in exile voiced their opposition to the
Games through publications such as Arbeiter Illustrierte Zeitung (The Worker Illustrated Newspaper).
Some boycott proponents supported
counter-Olympics. One of the largest was the “People's
Olympiad” planned for summer 1936 in Barcelona, Spain; it was
canceled after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in July 1936,
just as thousands of athletes had begun to arrive. Individual Jewish
athletes from a number of European countries also chose to boycott
the Berlin Olympics.
America Decides to Go
On December 8, 1935, the Amateur Athletic Union
defeated the proposal to boycott the Olympics by two-and-a-half
votes. Avery Brundage maneuvered the vote to achieve a victory.
At no time did President Franklin
D. Roosevelt become involved in the boycott issue, despite warnings from
high-level American diplomats regarding Nazi exploitation of the
Olympics for propaganda. Roosevelt continued a 40-year tradition in
which the American Olympic Committee operated independently of
outside influence.
Once the Amateur Athletic Union of the United
States voted for participation in December 1935, however, the other
countries fell in line. Forty-nine teams from around the world
competed in the Berlin Games, more than in any previous Olympics.
Germany had the largest team at the Berlin Games with 348 athletes.
The United States had the second largest team with 312 members. The
Soviet Union did not participate in the Berlin Games or any Olympiad
until the 1952 Helsinki Games.
The Propaganda Games
The Olympics were a perfect arena for the Nazi
propaganda machine, which was unsurpassed at staging elaborate public
spectacles and rallies. Choreographed pageantry, record-breaking
athletic feats, and warm German hospitality made the 1936 Olympic
Games memorable for athletes and spectators. Behind the facade,
however, a ruthless dictatorship persecuted its enemies and rearmed
for war to acquire new “living space” for the “Aryan
master race.”
Germany skillfully promoted the Olympics with
colorful posters and magazine spreads. Athletic imagery drew a link
between Nazi Germany and ancient Greece. These portrayals symbolized
the Nazi racial myth that superior German civilization was the
rightful heir of an “Aryan” culture of classical antiquity.
The Nazis reduced their vision of classical antiquity to ideal
“Aryan” racial types: heroic, blue-eyed blonds with
finely-chiseled features.
From February 6 to February 16, 1936, Germany
hosted the Winter Olympics at Garmisch-Partenkirchen in the Bavarian
Alps. Yielding to international Olympic leaders' insistence on
“fair play,” German officials allowed Rudi Ball, who was
half-Jewish, to compete on the nation's ice hockey team. Hitler also
ordered anti-Jewish signs temporarily removed from public view.
Still, Nazi deceptions for propaganda purposes were not wholly
successful. Western journalists observed and reported troop maneuvers
at Garmisch. As a result, the Nazi regime would minimize the
military's presence at the Summer Olympics.
In August 1936 Olympic flags and swastikas
bedecked the monuments and houses of a festive, crowded Berlin. Most
tourists were unaware that the Nazi regime had temporarily removed
anti-Jewish signs. Neither would tourists have known of the
“clean up” ordered by the German Ministry of Interior in
which the Berlin Police arrested all Gypsies prior to the Games. On
July 16, 1936, some 800 Gypsies were arrested and interned under
police guard in a special Gypsy camp in the Berlin suburb of Marzahn.
Also in preparation for the arrival of Olympic spectators, Nazi
officials ordered that foreign visitors should not be subjected to
the criminal strictures of the Nazi anti-homosexual laws.
The Reich Press Chamber under Joseph Goebbels's
Ministry of Propaganda exerted strict censorship over the German
press, radio, film, and publishing. The Chamber issued numerous
directives regarding coverage of the Olympic Games, limiting the
scope and content of reporting by German journalists.
“German newspapers will print --
at their own risk -- reports from the Olympics released prior to the
official press report.”
July 22, 1936
“Press coverage should not mention that there are two
non-Aryans among the women: Helene Mayer (fencing) and Gretel
Bergmann (high jump and all-around track and field
competition).”
July 16, 1936
'The racial point of view should not be
used in any way in reporting sports results; above all Negroes should
not be insensitively reported. . . . Negroes are American citizens
and must be treated with respect as Americans.“
August
3, 1936
“No comments should be made
regarding Helene Mayer's non-Aryan ancestry or her expectations for a
gold medal at the Olympics.”
February 19, 1936
The northern section of the Olympic
village, originally utilized by the Wehrmacht [German army], should
not be referred to as 'Kasernel' (the barracks), but will hereafter
be called `North Section Olympic Village.'”
July
27, 1936
The Games Begin
On August 1, 1936, Hitler opened the XIth
Olympiad. Musical fanfares directed by the famous composer Richard
Strauss announced the dictator's arrival to the largely German crowd.
Hundreds of athletes in opening day regalia marched into the stadium,
team by team in alphabetical order. Inaugurating a new Olympic
ritual, a lone runner arrived bearing a torch carried by relay from
the site of the ancient Games in Olympia, Greece.
Eighteen Black athletes represented the United
States in the 1936 Olympics. African American athletes won 14 medals,
nearly one-fourth of the 56 medals awarded the U.S. team in all
events, and dominated the popular track and field events. Many
American journalists hailed the victories of Jesse Owens and other
Blacks as a blow to the Nazi myth of Aryan supremacy. Goebbels's
press censorship prevented German reporters from expressing their
prejudices freely, but one leading Nazi newspaper demeaned the Black
athletes by referring to them as “auxiliaries.” The
continuing social and economic discrimination the Black medalists
faced upon returning home underscored the irony of their victory in
racist Germany.
African-American Olympic Medalists in 1936
| David Albritton |
High jump, silver |
| Cornelius Johnson |
High jump, gold |
| James LuValle |
400-meter run, bronze |
| Ralph Metcalfe |
4x100-meter relay, gold
100-meter dash,silver |
| Jesse Owens |
100-meter dash, gold
200-meter dash, gold
Broad (long) jump, gold
4x100-meter relay, gold |
| Frederick Pollard, Jr |
100-meter hurdles, bronze |
| Matthew Robinson |
200-meter dash, silver |
| Archie Williams |
400-meter run, gold |
| Jack Wilson |
Bantamweight boxing, silver |
| John Woodruff |
800-meter run, gold |
The Baltimore Afro-American (August 8,
1936) and other newspapers spread the story that Hitler refused to
shake Jesse Owens's hand or congratulate other Black medalists. In
fact, during the very first day of Olympic competition, when Owens
did not compete, Olympic protocol officers implored Hitler to receive
either all the medal winners or none, and the Fuhrer chose the
latter. Whether he did this to avoid shaking hands with
“non-Aryans” is unclear. Privately, Minister of Propaganda
Goebbels called the victories by Blacks “a disgrace.”
Ignoring censors' orders to avoid offending foreign guests with
racist commentaries, the radical Nazi newspaper Der Angriff (The
Attack) wrote on August 6: “If the American team had not brought
along Black auxiliaries . . . one would have regarded the Yankees as
the biggest disappointment of the Games.”
Olympics Aren't For
Jews
Two weeks before the Olympics began, German
officials informed Gretel Bergmann, a Jewish athlete who had equaled
the German women's record in the high jump, that she was denied a
place on the team. As the winning jump at the Olympics had been
attained by Bergmann earlier, the Germans sacrificed a chance for a
gold medal with this action.
As a token gesture to mollify the West, German
authorities allowed the half-Jewish fencer Helene Mayer to represent
Germany in Berlin. No other Jewish athlete competed for Germany.
Mayer claimed a silver medal in women's individual foil and, like all
other medalists for Germany, gave the Nazi salute on the podium.
Two-time European champion Ilona Schacherer-Elek, a part-Jew from
Hungary won the gold medal and the bronze went to Ellen Preis, an
Austrian, who was also of Jewish descent.
After the Olympics, Mayer returned to the United
States. In 1937, she won the world championship in Paris, defeating
Schacherer-Elek. During the war, Preis was forced to go into hiding
to avoid arrest and deportation. [1] In the 1948 Olympics in London, Elek
and Preis again won the gold and bronze medals respectively. Mayer
returned to Germany in 1952 but died soon after of cancer.
A controversial move at the Games was the benching
of two American Jewish runners, Marty
Glickman and Sam Stoller. Both had trained for the 4x100-meter
relay, but on the day before the event, they were replaced by Jesse
Owens and Ralph Metcalfe, the team's two fastest sprinters. Various
reasons were given for the change. The coaches claimed they needed
their fastest runners to win the race. Glickman has said that Coach
Dean Cromwell and Avery Brundage were motivated by anti-Semitism and the desire to spare the Führer the embarrassing sight of two
American Jews on the winning podium. Stoller did not believe
anti-Semitism was involved, but the 21-year-old described the
incident in his diary as the “most humiliating episode” in
his life.
Thirteen Jews or persons of Jewish descent won
medals in the Nazi Olympics, including six Hungarians. Many Hungarian
Jews shared their fellow citizens' passion for sport and viewed
participation as a means of assimilation. In the 1930s, however, the
anti-Semitic views of the fascist Hungarian government that developed
close ties to Hitler's regime also pervaded some fields of sport.
Fencing officials openly disdained Jews, even champion fencers such
as Endre Kabos, who won the gold medal for Hungary in the individual
and team saber events.
Jewish Olympic Medalists in 1936
| Samuel Balter |
United States |
Basketball, gold |
| Gyorgy Brody |
Hungary |
Water Polo, gold |
| Miklos Sarkany |
Hungary |
Water Polo, gold |
| Karoly Karpati |
Hungary |
Freestyle Wrestling, gold |
| Endre Kabos |
Hungary |
Individual Saber, gold
Team Saber, gold |
| Irving Maretzky |
Canada |
Basketball, silver |
| Gerard Blitz |
Belgium |
Water Polo, bronze |
| Ibolya K. Csak |
Hungary |
High Jump, gold |
| Robert Fein |
Austria |
Weightlifting, gold |
| Helene Mayer |
Germany |
Individual Foil, silver |
| Ellen Preis |
Austria |
Individual Foil, bronze |
| Ilona Schacherer-Elek |
Hungary |
Individual Foil, gold |
| Jadwiga Wajs |
Poland |
Discus Throw, silver |
Hitler Triumphant
Germany emerged victorious from the XIth Olympiad.
Its athletes captured the most medals overall, and German hospitality
and organization won the praises of visitors. Most newspaper accounts
echoed Frederick Birchall's report in The New York Times that the
Games put Germans “back in the fold of nations,” and even
made them “more human again.” Some even found reason to
hope that this peaceable interlude would endure. Only a few
reporters, such as foreign correspondent William Shirer, regarded the
Berlin glitter as merely hiding a racist, militaristic regime:
“I'm afraid the Nazis have succeeded with
their propaganda. First, the Nazis have run the Games on a lavish
scale never before experienced, and this has appealed to the
athletes. Second, the Nazis have put up a very good front for the
general visitors, especially the big businessmen” (Shirer's
diary, Berlin, August 16, 1936).
As the post-Games reports were filed, Hitler
pressed on with grandiose plans for German expansion. These included
taking over the Olympics forever.
“In 1940 the Olympic Games will take place
in Tokyo. But thereafter they will take place in Germany for all
time to come, in this stadium” (Hitler, in conversation with Albert
Speer, general architectural inspector for the Reich, spring
1937)
Concerted propaganda efforts
continued well after the Olympics with the
international release in 1938 of Olympia, Leni
Riefenstahl's controversial film documentary
of the Games. The pause in the Germany's anti-Jewish
campaign, however, was brief. William E. Dodd,
the U.S. ambassador to Germany, reported that
Jews awaited “with fear and trembling” the end
of the Olympic truce. Two days after the Olympics,
Captain Wolfgang Fürstner, head
of the Olympic village, killed himself after
he was dismissed from active military service
because of his Jewish ancestry. In 1937, German
Jewish track star Gretel Bergmann emigrated to
the United States to escape persecution.
Sources: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
[1] According to a relative of Ellen Preis, the athlete was forced to trace her family background to the 1600s to prove she was not in fact Jewish. In addition, Preis lived in Vienna with her family throughout the war. Other official sources maintain that Preis was Jewish.
|