A 4-foot 9-inch Jewish gymnast gave a clutch performance on an injured ankle to pull America to an Olympic gold. TOM TUGEND SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS he press called gymnast Kerri Strug "the biggest little woman in America"; President Clinton phoned her; Time magazine put her on the cover; and the 22,000-strong Jewish commu- nity of Tucson, Ariz., expressed quiet pride that the 18-year-old daughter of Dr. Burt and Melanie Strug had literally vaulted into the ranks of America's icons. Kerri became an instant Olympic heroine when she suppressed the pain of a severely twisted ankle to success- fully complete a second vault she thought was needed to cinch a gold medal for the U.S. women's gymnastic team. Time described the feat as "Kerri's hero- ic leap into Olympic history," and planned to put her smiling face — and the gold medal — on the cover of its Aug. 5 issue. After the bomb explosion at Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Park, Time split the cover between Strug and an injured vic- tim of the bombing, accompanied by the legend "Courage and Cowardice." Kerri's intensity and determination came as no surprise to her father, a heart surgeon, and her mother, both active members of the Tucson Jewish commu- nity. Steve Lipman of the Atlanta Jewish Times contributed to this story. At age 12, the diminutive ath- lete convinced her reluctant par- ents to let her move to Houston, to train with famed gymnastics coach Bela Karolyi. A straight "A" student in high school, Kerri had planned to enroll at UCLA this fall, but she may now be persuaded to turn pro and join her teammates in a lucrative, 30-city exhibition tour. None of the worshippers at Congregation Anshei Israel in Tucson, Ariz., last week knew the Hebrew name of the congregant for whom the mishebarach prayer was said. But everyone knew her diagnosis. Kerri Strug had torn two liga- ments and had sustained a third- degree lateral sprain in her left ankle. The 18-year-old gymnast suffered the injury in a pair of leaps that insured the American women's team its first-ever team gold medal. "People are excited — very ex- cited," said Rabbi Arthur Oleisky, spiritual leader of Anshei Israel. Strug's parents, Burt and Melanie, have been members of the Con- servative congregation, the city's largest, for eight years. Kern Strug is Rabbi Oleisky carried by made the mishe- Coach Bela barach — a prayer Karolyi to the for health — after medal ceremony. Strug suffered the injury that kept her from entering the subsequent all- around and individual gymnastic competitions. The rabbi said the blessing in the name of "HaBachura Strug" — the young woman Strug. No one knew the name of Strug or her mother, which normally are recited during a mishebarach. Many people in Tucson are not aware that Strug, who spent most of her last five years training away from home, is Jewish, Rabbi Oleisky said. Strug did not attend the synagogue's religious school or become bat mitzvah there. "She's too busy. There was never time," Strug's mother said. But Strug, whose face and high- pitched voice were ubiquitous in the American media last week, told inter- viewers that she offered a prayer after she twisted her ankle on her first vault and waited for her second. "Please, God," she said, "let me do this —just one more time." If Kerri's feat was one defining mo- ment of the Olympics, the other was the bombing, and the horror of that explo- sion had one curious side-effect. For days on end, a delegation corn- posed of relatives of the 11 Israeli ath- letes killed by PLO terrorists at the 1972 Olympics in Munich had pleaded in vain for some public recognition of that mas- sacre. Following the bombing in Atlanta, the national media recalled the 1972 killings and linked the chain of terrorism stretch- ing from Munich to Atlanta. ❑