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Jewish Gymnast, 7, Balances Religious Faith And Sports

Balancing Sports And Faith

SAMANTHA HENRY   03/ 2/11 09:49 AM ET  AP

NEWARK, N.J. — When 7-year-old Amalya Knapp took the beam at the New Jersey state gymnastics finals last month, her excellent performance symbolized a far more complicated balancing act.

Although she would have ranked fifth in her age group, eligible for a medal, her individual scores were discounted. She was unable to compete on a Saturday because of her Orthodox Jewish family's observance of the Sabbath.

"I was upset," Amalya said, "but my mother told me there are decisions you have to make."

USA Gymnastics made an effort to accommodate her and let her compete the next day, Sunday, Feb. 13, and permitted her scores to factor into her team's overall rankings.

But the national governing body held that because she hadn't competed at the same time as girls of her skill level and age group, her scores: 9.7 on vault, 9.575 floor, 9.5 beam and 8.75 bars – would not count toward individual medals or rankings.

The news disappointed the second-grader, a member of the US Gym team of the United States Gymnastics Development Center in Leonia, N.J. She had placed first in the all-around category in five previous competitions.

"She tried so hard, and practiced for months, and really put in her all, but just couldn't get that final award for her efforts," said Chavie Knapp, Amalya's mother. Knapp emphasized that her family appreciated USA Gymnastics' efforts to discuss the issue with them and try to reach a compromise.

"I wasn't bitter, and wasn't angry and worked with the organization and tried to work within the system," Knapp said.

Knapp said she and her husband encourage Amalya to engage in the sports and activities she loves, including ice skating lessons and playing for a Jewish youth soccer league that never practices or competes on Saturdays. Amalya said she wants one day to be an Olympic gymnast.

If she had to choose again between competing or observing the Sabbath, she said, "I would do the religion things."

She isn't the only young athlete faced with reconciling her passion for sports with religious obligation. Experts say the issue arises in all faiths, in nearly every sport, and at all levels of competition.

Last month, a standout Iowa high school wrestler, Joel Northrup, refused to compete against a girl at a state tournament, citing his Pentecostal religious beliefs against contact sports between men and women. His position caused him to relinquish any championship hopes.

One of the most memorable instances of an athlete embracing religion over team duty was the refusal of Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers to pitch the opening game of the 1965 World Series. Koufax was observing Yom Kippur, a day of fasting and atonement considered the holiest date of the Jewish calendar.

It was Koufax's story that Amalya's parents chose to explain to her that the Sabbath – for which observant Jews abstain from working from sundown Friday until sundown Saturday – would always take precedence over the sport she loves.

"My father told me stories of people who had to do this, and I felt better," Amalya said.

Chavie Knapp said Amalya, who attends school at the Rosenbaum Yeshiva of North Jersey, was disappointed to miss her first state finals competition in a sport she had loved since she was a toddler. She practices up to 12 hours a week and dreams of competing in the Olympics one day.

"We had to try to help her understand how we really feel strongly that she can be a great gymnast and still be a committed Orthodox Jew," Knapp said. "We want her to be able to combine the love that she has for both of those things into an appreciation for both, and not a resentment of either."

A spokeswoman for USA Gymnastics, Leslie King, said the organization does its best to reasonably provide alternatives to athletes who face scheduling conflicts for religious or other reasons, when possible.

"USA Gymnastics is sensitive to these issues and will continue in its efforts to provide reasonable options to athletes under appropriate circumstances," King said in an e-mail message.

Assemblyman Gary Schaer, D-Passaic, the only Orthodox Jewish member of New Jersey's Legislature, wrote USA Gymnastics, saying its policies don't go far enough to accommodate athletes from all religious and racial backgrounds.

"I am sure you would agree about the critical importance in a child's life of both religious observance and athletic competition and that one should not come at the detriment of the other," he wrote.

Chavie Knapp said news coverage of her daughter's situation, first reported in The Record newspaper of Woodland Park, N.J., had put the family at the center of a heated debate over whether religious exemptions have a place in sports.

"This issue has really been pushing a lot of buttons for people," Knapp said. She's received an outpouring of mostly supportive comments, she said.

But there have been plenty of detractors.

"I had the other side, of people very angry, saying: why should I be accommodated when there's so many different religions and so many different issues that people have that come up, and why did I sign up for something knowing that I wouldn't be able to go to some of the events?" She said.

Rabbi Barry Dov Lerner of Wyncote, Pa., who competed for Arizona State University in the 1960s and held a national title in archery, is a Conservative Jew who observes the Sabbath.

College-level competition is rare for a Sabbath-observant Jew, Lerner said.

"In a nutshell, you can participate in sports, you can enjoy it, you can excel, but the way the world runs, you're not going to be in any competitions," he said. "You can't be in any sport that has competitions on the Sabbath, and not just games, but also workouts and practices on the Sabbath or holidays; that means you're not eligible for a football scholarship," Lerner said, adding with a laugh: "Well, go learn the oboe."

Lerner said he encourages young observant Jews to engage in sports for the training and self-discipline it teaches, but knowing that they may not reach competition levels. He teaches sports and other activities at Jewish summer camps, where children play games on Saturday, but scores aren't kept, to observe Sabbath rules against competing.

The rabbi said it's rare to find Orthodox Jews or strict Sabbath observers among top Jewish athletes, including Israel's professional and Olympic athletes.

Jeffrey S. Gurock, a professor at New York's Yeshiva University and author of the book Judaism's Encounter with American Sports, said Orthodox Jewish athletes or religiously observant athletes of other faiths can only reach a certain competitive level before running into conflicts.

"Can you be fully observant Jew and compete, and also observe the Sabbath? The answer is no," Gurock said. "America is making it easier, but in the end, if you're an Orthodox Jew, your religion will trump the sport, and if you want to be fully observant, you're only going to rise so far unless you can devote 365 days to your sport."

He said the sports world had increasingly recognized, and embraced, America's diversity and pluralism compared to decades past.

"It's still a difficult issue, and if you're going to be a top-flight athlete, you have to make a choice," Gurock said. "They're not going to postpone Wimbledon."

Other major sporting events have been postponed, however, for religious considerations, Gurock said. It's the reason major sporting events are rarely broadcast on Christmas Eve or that ESPN and Major League Baseball agreed, after complaints from die-hard Jewish baseball fans, to switch the starting time of a Yankees-Red Sox game on Sept. 27, 2009, so it wouldn't conflict with the beginning of Yom Kippur.

"Sports is the metaphor, but the real story is how do you live and integrate into American culture and maintain your own tradition," Gurock said. "It's a Jewish story, a Muslim story, a Mormon story."

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NEWARK, N.J. — When 7-year-old Amalya Knapp took the beam at the New Jersey state gymnastics finals last month, her excellent performance symbolized a far more complicated balancing act. Althou...
NEWARK, N.J. — When 7-year-old Amalya Knapp took the beam at the New Jersey state gymnastics finals last month, her excellent performance symbolized a far more complicated balancing act. Althou...
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07:58 PM on 03/05/2011
If they wish to destroy their child's dream of the Olympics for religious reasons that's their right and business but stop the whining. USA Gymnastics made every effort to accommodate their religious practices. Imagine the discomfort of Muslims who are forced to work and attend school on their Sabbath which is Friday. My son was on a swim team in Brooklyn and all their meets were on Saturdays and Sundays as those were the days not in conflict with school. Every effort was made not to conflict with major holidays. Personally I believe that God, if he/she exists, wouldn't care about some child in a sport event on the Sabbath but rather be more concerned about the religious intolerance and hatred so evident in the world today.
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f0rTyLeGz
Everything is falling.
03:28 AM on 03/05/2011
God cares what we do on the weekends? Who knew?
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
06:49 PM on 03/03/2011
GIVE ME A BREAK.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StarDagger
The Welfare of the People is the Supreme Law
06:42 PM on 03/03/2011
The real crime here is the programming of this girl by her parents into a self-marginalizing belief system.

What is sadder is that it happens to most people!
.

.
yes
05:52 PM on 03/03/2011
As her mother said, ""there are decisions you have to make."

So why complain afterwards?

Not the girls fault, poor thing. But if her mother thinks that God might get angry if her daughter goes there on a Saturday ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
05:17 PM on 03/03/2011
A seven year old that is this talented! Good for her.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jessica Erin
micro bio is micro.
02:27 PM on 03/03/2011
hard to believe she would choose Judaism over possibly being an olympian someday. I can appreciate a dedication to religion, but she will be held back from success on a global scale if she never competes on a saturday.
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alterego55
"Always intended to be a factual statement"
01:33 PM on 03/03/2011
If this little girl insists on following the tenets of her parents' religion, she will have no place in athletic competition. She can keep gymnastics as her personal hobby.

If most Jews kept to this orthodoxy, there would be no Jewish soccer moms.

Lesson. Don't expect the world to revolve around your personal mythical beliefs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alitwoshoes
02:01 AM on 03/03/2011
7 years old is not too young to know and to believe and to stand up for what you believe to be the right thing to do.
This is Freedom of Conscience. What is wrong here is that there should be accommodation and it should have been taken care of at the very start. There are Christian denominations that also observe the Sabbath. Seventh day Adventists, Seventh day Baptists are a couple. What a lot of people do not understand is that these people believe in the Scriptures and believe that the love of God must come first in all relationships. Work, play, school etc. There are states that recognize that when it comes to freedom to practice one's religion that when possible accommodations can usually be made. Instead of railing about the parents as if they were preventing their child from doing what that child wants, the parent should be held up as virtuous and good parents for instilling in their child a concept that there are actions that will be character building.
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HeevenSteven
20 Minutes into the future.
11:48 PM on 03/02/2011
That's great that the parents of a 7 year old allow her the free will to choose her faith, and exercise it as she sees fit... bwahahahaha..
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Uncle Bob
Darwin loves you.
09:51 PM on 03/02/2011
If the obvious needed to be stated, she is not making this decision, she is far too young to fully understand the issues involved here. The parents are forcing the issue and the child is but a pawn in this game.

I pity the child. Her situation is an accident of birth. If she had parents of just about any different faith, there would be no issue whatsoever. Alas....
01:46 AM on 03/03/2011
on the other hand who knows if a different family would have started her in gymnastics at all..
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Uncle Bob
Darwin loves you.
10:43 AM on 03/03/2011
Good point. They might have started her on crack instead.

How meta.
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GrantS
I'm liberal through and through.
07:57 PM on 03/02/2011
Am I the only one who thinks that the parents forced this choice on the girl and she convinced herself of it.

Indoctrination is awful.
08:55 PM on 03/02/2011
Not the only one. This child is of an age she would believe fairies and goblins, too.

It is also sad that this sort of thing keeps observant Jews from becoming high school and college athletes, too. Most competitions ARE held on Saturdays. There are probably a lot of talented kids who are missing out.
11:02 AM on 03/03/2011
"Am I the only one who thinks that the parents forced this choice on the girl and she convinced herself of it."

There's no way to prove that for sure, though.
07:26 PM on 03/02/2011
Sad to see a child indoctrinated so early with religion. It is almost child abuse.
hfpf
Wake up World.
01:03 AM on 03/03/2011
Is it child abuse to indoctrinate your children with the belief in Santa Claus? You owe these parents an apology. They are entitled to raise their children as they wish. When the child reaches the age of majority, the child can then decide for herself what her religious preferences will or won't be.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
09:22 AM on 03/03/2011
If a belief in santa claus messes up your saturdays, then yes.
03:25 PM on 03/02/2011
"I am sure you would agree about the critical importance in a child's life of both religious observance and athletic competition "

--
No, I am sure I would not agree.
08:55 PM on 03/02/2011
Agreed.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
09:23 AM on 03/03/2011
Neither is necessary, but at least the second is healthy.