Fred Oberlander

Olympic medal record
Competitor for  Canada
Men's Wrestling
Maccabiah Games
Gold 1953 Israel Heavyweight

Fred Oberlander (23 May 1911, in Vienna, Austria – 1996) was an Austrian, British, and Canadian wrestler.

Wrestling career

Between 1930 and 1950 he won two Austrian Junior wrestling titles, five French Heavyweight Championships, seven British Heavyweight Championships (1939–45, 1948), and the 1950 Canadian Heavyweight crown.

He also won the 1935 World Exhibition Championship in Brussels, the 1937 Moulin Rouge International Championship, the Allied Championships of 1944, and the Commonwealth Games title in 1948, in addition to several silver and bronze medals.

World Championships

At the 1935 World Championships, Oberlander was listed as "stateless." His first match in that competition was against the German champion Kurt Siebert. Recalled Oberlander,

The German coach objected to the Hakoah Vienna emblem on my wrestling attire, claiming that it was a political insignia. I answered that it was my club’s emblem, which it was. Finally, the referee decided that the Swastika on Siebert’s jersey was also a political insignia. On that note, the match began — and finished in my favour.

He won the world championships.

Olympic Games

Oberlander was nominated to represent Austria at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, but he wrote, "For obvious reasons, being Jewish, I refused."

He represented Great Britain in the 1948 Olympic Games (he was team captain at the age of 37).

Oberlander then emigrated to Canada, where he founded the Canadian Maccabi Association.

Maccabiah Games

In 1953, he captured the Maccabiah Games Heavyweight Wrestling Championship and was named Outstanding Jewish World Athlete. The award was presented to him by Israel’s first Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion.

Honor

An entire floor in the Pierre Gildesgame (Maccabi) Sport Museum in Ramat Gan, Israel, is named in his honor.

Family

His son Ron Oberlander President, CEO, Abitibi Consolidated. Distributer to The New York Times

His son Philip Oberlander followed in his father's footsteps, wrestling as a welter weight in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He did not medal.

See also

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