Oldest Olympic Champion in World Dies at 103 in Hungary
- 3 Jan 2025 10:01 AM
Representing Hungary at the Olympic Games in Helsinki in 1952 and Melbourne in 1956, Keleti won 10 Olympic medals including five gold medals, three silver, and two bronze medals.
She was the oldest living Olympic champion in the world and Hungary's female Olympian with the most medals.
About Ágnes Keleti
Ágnes Keleti, (born Klein, 9 January 1921 – 2 January 2025), was a Hungarian artistic gymnast and coach who won multiple Olympic medals. She was the oldest living Olympic champion and medallist, reaching her 100th birthday on 9 January 2021.
While representing Hungary at the Summer Olympics, she won 10 Olympic medals, including five gold medals, three silver medals, and two bronze medals, and is considered one of the most successful Jewish Olympic athletes of all time.
Keleti holds more Olympic medals than any other individual with Israeli citizenship and more Olympic medals than any other Jew, except Mark Spitz.
She was the most successful athlete at the 1956 Summer Olympics. In 1957, Keleti immigrated to Israel. In 2017, she was awarded the Israel Prize in sports.
Biography
Agnes Klein, later Keleti, was born in Budapest, Hungary. She began to train in gymnastics at the age of 4, and by 16 was the Hungarian National Champion in gymnastics. Over the course of her career, between 1937 and 1956, she won the Championships title ten times. She changed her surname to Keleti to make it more Hungarian-sounding.
Keleti was considered a top prospect for the Hungarian team at the 1940 Olympics, but the escalation of World War II canceled both the 1940 and the 1944 Games.
She was expelled from her gymnastics club in 1941 for being a Jew. Because she had heard a rumor that married women were not taken to labor camps, she hastily married István Sárkány in 1944. Sárkány was a Hungarian gymnast of the 1930s who achieved national titles and took part in the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
Keleti survived the war by purchasing and using an identity paper of a Christian girl and working as a maid in a small village in the Hungarian countryside. Her mother and sister went into hiding and were saved using Swiss protection papers issued by diplomat Carl Lutz and possibly also by Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg.
Her father and other relatives were murdered by the Nazis by gassing in the Auschwitz concentration camp. In the winter of 1944–45, during the Siege of Budapest by Soviet forces near the end of World War II, Keleti would collect bodies of those who had died and place them in a mass grave each morning.
After the war, Keleti played the cello professionally and resumed training. In 1946, she won her first Hungarian championship. In 1947, she won the Central European gymnastics title. She qualified for the 1948 Summer Olympics but missed the competition due to tearing a ligament in her ankle.
She is listed on the Official List of Gymnastic Participants as Ágnes Sárkány. At the World University Games of 1949, she won four gold, one silver, and one bronze medal. She divorced her husband, István Sárkány, in 1950.
Keleti continued training and competed at the Olympics for the first time at the age of 31 at the 1952 Games in Helsinki. She earned four medals: gold in the floor exercise, silver in the team competition, and bronze in the team portable apparatus event and the uneven bars. Keleti continued on to the 1954 World Championships, where she won on the uneven bars, becoming world champion.
At the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Keleti won six medals, including gold medals in three of the four individual event finals: floor, bars, and balance beam, and placed second in the all-around. She was the most successful athlete at these games. The Hungarian team placed first in the portable apparatus event and second in the team competition.
At the age of 35, Keleti became the oldest female gymnast ever to win gold. The Soviet Union invaded Hungary during the 1956 Olympics. Keleti, along with 44 other athletes from the Hungarian delegation, decided to remain in Australia and received political asylum. She became a coach for Australian gymnasts.
Keleti emigrated to Israel in 1957, competing in the 1957 Maccabiah Games, and she was able to send for her mother and sister. In 1959, she married Hungarian physical education teacher Robert Biro, whom she met in Israel, and they had two sons, Daniel and Rafael. Following her retirement from competition, Keleti worked as a physical education instructor at Tel Aviv University and for 34 years at the Wingate Institute for Sports in Netanya.
Keleti also coached and worked with Israel's national gymnastics team well into the 1990s. In 2015, she returned to her native Budapest.
Keleti has been the oldest Hungarian Olympic champion since Sándor Tarics died on 21 May 2016. She became the oldest living Olympic champion when Lydia Wideman died on 13 April 2019. She celebrated her 100th birthday in January 2021. She became the longest-lived Olympic champion ever on 7 August 2023, breaking the record previously held by Tarics.
Keleti died in Budapest on 2 January 2025, at the age of 103, a week before her 104th birthday, after being hospitalized with pneumonia in the previous week.
More:
WIkipedia.org
Source:
MTI - The Hungarian News Agency, founded in 1881.
*********************************
You're very welcome to comment, discuss and enjoy more stories via our Facebook page:
Facebook.com/XpatLoopNews + via XpatLoop’s groups: Budapest Expats / Expats Hungary
You can subscribe to our newsletter here: XpatLoop.com/Newsletters
Do you want your business to reach tens of thousands of potential high-value expat customers? Then just contact us here.
LATEST NEWS IN sport