Berlin Olympics 1936
by Mike Walsh
August 1, 2016 marks the 80th anniversary of the opening day of the 1936 Berlin Olympics. The Berlin event was unique in that it boasted the largest number of foreign athletes in the history of the Olympics. The Berlin Olympic Village was so beautifully designed that every Olympic village since has been modelled on it. The Berlin stadium boasted seating for 100,000 spectators. Attending were four million fans and journalists from 41 nations. The Berlin Olympics was the first to be televised. Competing in the 1936 Games were a record number of participants: 4066 athletes, including 331 women from 49 countries.
The 1936 Berlin Olympics is invariably referred to as the Olympics during which American Negro, Jesse Owens, ‘humiliated Nazi Germany and destroyed the myth of Aryan superiority.’ The truth is quite the opposite.
Jesse wins gold
Jesse Owens was a fine athlete and citizen of one of the world’s most racist countries. The contrast between the United States and the Workers Reich would have been quite remarkable for this humble and likeable ex-cotton picker. In Hitler’s Germany, Jesse Owens could share a bus or tram ride with white people. Treated equally in all respects the athlete could enjoy a movie accompanied by German friends. Unlike the United States, the sprinter would use the same toilet facilities, dine with Europeans in restaurants and stay in hotels without discrimination being shown towards him. There was much that the track athlete could do in Hitler’s Germany forbidden to coloured people in the United States.
In his homeland coloureds were required to eat apart from White associates and fellow athletes. If coloureds approached a hotel they were required to do so through the tradesmen’s entrance. There were no Negroes on any major league baseball team and no Negro swimmers. This was in the so-called enlightened north. In the southern states there was no possibility of a Negro being allowed to participate in any sport unless he competed solely with other Negroes.
Awakening in the Olympic Village the Olympian “was greeted by paparazzi and amateur photographers ‘who were gathered outside his bedroom window to click at the athlete before he could gather poise for one of his many appearances before the mobs in Berlin.” The coloured athlete’s coach, Lawrence N. Snyder wrote in the Saturday Evening Post, November 7, 1936, “Jesse Owens was cheered as loudly as any Aryan.”
The recycled media lie is that at the ‘Nazi Olympics’, Adolf Hitler snubbed Jesse Owens by refusing to shake his hand. What are the facts? The elected German leader on the first day of the Berlin Olympics did indeed shake the hands of several successful competitors. That same evening the Fuhrer received a message from Count Baillet-Latour. The President of the International Olympic Committee respectfully pointed out that he was ‘a guest of honour at the Games and should congratulate all or none, in public at least.’
In common with all other national leaders Germany’s head of state chose the latter as being the most sensible course. With 156 gold medals being awarded at various locations and times it was physically impossible to congratulate every winner. Jesse Owens was not congratulated by the Fuhrer; nor was any successful competitors, white or otherwise.
It is interesting to note that America’s Jewish President Roosevelt refused to meet the coloured athlete despite there being no such restriction imposed upon his doing so. After the 1936 Berlin Olympics wards, Jesse Owens said:
When I passed the (German) Chancellor he arose, waved his hand at me, and I waved back at him. I think the writers showed bad taste in criticising the man of the hour in Germany.
On their arrival in London, Owens and his coach Larry Snyder complained that they felt like ‘trained seals’. The two were subjected to a barrage of ‘fraudulent publicity offers’. Such was the lack of integrity and respect shown to the pair they refused further engagements. Time was to prove Larry Snyder and Jesse Owens right as none of the publicity offers came to anything. However, big name promoters like Eddy Cantor did receive free of charge much favourable publicity.
Norman Katkov is author of
Jesse Owens Revisited. (The World of Sport, p.289):
Back home in the United States, Jesse Owens was treated like a freak and an animal. “Before curious crowds he raced horses (and won). He ran against cars, trucks, dogs, and baseball players with a head start.”
This was a 1930’s America that had seen 26 Negroes lynched. It was an America where Negroes used separate public facilities; coloureds were schooled at all-black schools. Unlike the Workers Reich, in the United States non-Whites could not mix with white people in restaurants, cinemas, hotels, stadiums, etc.
What about the claim that “Owens swept the scoreboard and destroyed the Nazi myth of Aryan superiority.” The Workers Reich earned a total of 101 medals, 41 of which were gold, and gathered an impressive 223 points.
Germany’s only credible rival was the United States. Though three times Germany’s population, the U.S. won 40% fewer medals and points than did Hitler’s Germany. United States athletes gained 25 gold medals, four of which were awarded to Jesse Owens. The U.S point’s total tally was a mediocre 132 points. America’s geographical size and its reliance on coloured athletes did little to reduce its humiliation. Despite the U.S boasting many coloured sportsmen the combined total of medals awarded to such athletes amounted to only eleven gongs. The outcome ~ without Germany saying so ~ suggested that coloured athletes simply do not match the performance of their ethnic-European rivals.
Adolf Hitler’s Germany won more gold medals than the United States, Great Britain, India, Canada, Argentina, France, and Norway combined. These countries’ total population stands at 1,160 million, and in terms of population size, 14 times bigger than is Germany’s population.
AUTHOR’S NOTE: During the current Olympics the myths will be recycled by idle journalists and sports columnists. It is easy to email this true history article to them or quote from this article when the Jesse Owens myth appears in readers comment.
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