Hubbry Logo
Shaul LadanyShaul LadanyMain
Open search
Shaul Ladany
Community hub
Shaul Ladany
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Shaul Ladany
Shaul Ladany
from Wikipedia

Shaul Paul Ladany (Hebrew: שאול לדני; born April 2, 1936) is an Israeli Holocaust survivor, racewalker and two-time Olympian. He holds the world record in the 50-mile walk (7:23:50),[2] and the Israeli national record in the 50-kilometer walk (4:17:07). He is a former world champion in the 100-kilometer walk.[3][4]

Key Information

Ladany survived the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1944, when he was eight years old. In 1972, he survived the Munich Massacre.[5] He is now a Professor of Industrial Engineering and Management at Ben Gurion University,[2] has authored over a dozen books and 120 scholarly papers, and reportedly speaks nine languages. He lives in Omer, Israel.[4][2]

Asked if it would be fair to call him the ultimate survivor, Ladany laughed and answered: "I don't know about that. What I can say is that in my life there has never been a dull moment."[6]

Early and family life

[edit]

Ladany was born to a Jewish family in Belgrade, Yugoslavia.[2] He has two sisters, Shosh (two years older) and Marta (five years younger, actually his first cousin, adopted by his parents when she was six months old).[7][8] He and his wife Shosh were married for 58 years, until her death in 2019, and have a daughter Danit[2] and three grandchildren who live in Modi'in.[3][9][10]

Concentration camp

[edit]

During the Holocaust in Europe, Ladany's maternal grandmother and grandfather were sent to Auschwitz concentration camp,[2] where, Ladany has said, they "were made into soap."[11][12]

In April 1941, when he was five years old, the Germans attacked Belgrade and the Luftwaffe bombed his home.[2] His parents fled with him to Hungary.[13] There, when he was eight years old they tried to hide him in a monastery for safekeeping, warning him to keep secret the fact that he was Jewish. He was terrified the entire time that he would be discovered, but says that after that experience he wasn't afraid of anything.[4][6][12]

In 1944, the eight-year-old was captured by the Nazis with his parents, and shipped to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.[4][7][13][14][15][16] Many of his family were killed. But in December 1944, he was saved by American Jews who had paid a ransom to have a number of Jews, including him and his parents, released from the concentration camp, where 100,000 Jews had already been killed.[7][12][16][17][18]

Ladany recalled:

I saw my father beaten by the SS, and I lost most of my family there... A ransom deal that the Americans attempted saved 2,000 Jews and I was one. I actually went into the gas chamber, but was reprieved. God knows why.[7][15]

Describing the concentration camp, Major Dick Williams, one of the first British soldiers to enter and liberate the camp, said: "It was an evil, filthy place; a hell on Earth."[9] Ladany was one of the few of Yugoslavia's 70,000 Jews who survived the Holocaust.[12] He visits the concentration camp every time he is in Europe. He was also there for the 50th anniversary of liberation, and when a Bergen-Belsen museum was dedicated.[4]

He was brought on the Kastner train from Bergen-Belsen to Switzerland.[2] After the war ended, he and his family moved back to Belgrade. In December 1948, when he was 12 years old, the family emigrated to Israel, which had just become a nation state.[4][8][18]

Education

[edit]

Ladany received his BSc in Mechanical Engineering from the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology in 1960, and an MSc from Technion in 1961.[4][15][16][19] In 1964, he earned a Graduate Diploma in Business Administration from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.[4][19] In 1968, he was awarded the PhD in Business Administration by Columbia University,[4][15][16] followed by postdoctoral research at Tel Aviv University.

Competitive walking career

[edit]

Early career and Olympics

[edit]

Ladany began his competitive career as a marathon runner in Israel, when he was 18 years old.[20] He later said "in the 1950s, when I started running, people also thought I was a nut. Jews didn't run. They would laugh."[4] He also said that "People thought of it only as punishment for soldiers."[18] In his mid-twenties in the early 1960s, he switched to race walking.[7][8][15] Ladany walked his first race in 1962.[4] Commenting on the sport, he said "You need a certain type of mental attitude: a willingness to take punishment, to have a lack of comfort, and pain, to continue and continue. I'm not a psychologist, but was I stubborn, so I entered race walking? Or did I enter race walking, and become stubborn? It's the same in all long-distance events. Quitters don't win, and winners don't quit."[14]

In 1963, he won the first of his 28 Israeli national titles.[7] In 1966, he broke the oldest U.S. track record, which had stood since 1878, in the 50-mile-walk.[20] In April 1968, he again broke the U.S. record in the 50-mile-walk, with a time of 8:05:18 in New Jersey.[21] In 1968, at the age of 32, Ladany competed in his first Olympics – the 1968 Olympics – in the 50-kilometer walk (31 miles, 121 yards) in Mexico City.[7][22] He finished in 24th place,[2] with a time of 5 hours, 1 minute, and 6 seconds.[7][15] He trained and competed without a coach.[22]

At the 8th Maccabiah Games in July 1969, he won a gold medal in the 3-km walk (13.35.4). Then at the 1973 Maccabiah Games, he won the 10-km walk and the 50-km walk.[23][24] In early 1972, Ladany set a world record in the 50-mile walk in a time of 7:44:47, shattering the world mark that had stood since 1935.[8] In April 1972, he lowered his world record to 7:23:50, in New Jersey; a world record time that still stands today.[3][4][7][14][22][25][26] He also holds the Israeli national record in the 50-kilometer walk, at 4:17:07, which he also set in 1972.[3][4][15][25]

In September 1972, he returned as the sole male member of the Israeli track and field team, to compete in the 50-kilometer walk in the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Germany.[7][15] He said he wanted to show the Germans that a Jew had survived,[2] and he wore a Star of David on his warm-up jersey.[17][27] When he was congratulated by locals on his fluent German, he responded: "I learned it well when I spent a year at Bergen Belsen".[27][28] Asked about competing in Germany, the Holocaust survivor said: "I don't say I have to hate Germans. Of course not the younger generation, but I have no special sympathy for the older generation who have been accused of what happened in the Nazi period."[16]

Ladany finished his race in 19th place, with a time of 4 hours, 24 minutes, and 38 seconds.[7][15] Asked how he felt, he replied: "Arrogant because of what the Germans did to me; proud because I am a Jew".[16] He then returned to the athletes' Olympic Village and went to sleep.[7][27]

Munich massacre

[edit]

In the early hours of September 5, 1972, the Munich massacre began.[2] Eight rifle-carrying Palestinian terrorists, who were members of the Black September faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization, broke into the Israeli quarters in the Olympic Village to take the Israeli Olympic delegation athletes and coaches hostage.[15][29][30][31] The terrorists captured wrestling coach Moshe Weinberg. They shot and killed Weinberg, and threw his body out of a window onto the sidewalk.[29][32]

Early in the morning somebody wakens me, I open my eyes and that's when my roommate from the Mexico Olympic Games says, 'Get up, Monie was killed by Arab terrorists'. I knew him as a joker but that sounded too serious, so without thinking much, in my pyjamas, I went to the entrance door of the apartment, opened it and looked around. I have seen guards from the village and they were speaking to somebody that was standing in the entrance to apartment number one. I have noticed his dark skin and the hat and I listened, still without being afraid or thinking that something is very dangerous for me, and the guards are asking the permission to let the Red Cross enter apartment one and provide some aid to a wounded person and the man, he refuse. They said, 'Why should you be inhumane?', and the man replied something like either, the Jews or the Israelis 'are not humane either.' At that point I understood that something is going on and I closed the door.[33]

Another team member took Ladany to the window and pointed to the blood stains outside the apartment. They decided to leave the apartment via the rear of their apartment that backed onto a lawn, despite knowing that they would be visible to the terrorists.[33]

The terrorists from the second floor, from apartment number one, had a clear view from the window and we moved out, walked along the lawn without running or zigzagging but in strong and confident legs. Maybe it was stupid? But we had done so....we left the apartment through the lawn.[33]

Surviving terrorist Jamal Al-Gashey revealed that Ladany was spotted racing away from the building leading the terrorists to believe that they were too late to take any hostages in Apartment number two, though several were still inside the apartment.[34] Ladany ran around to the building housing the U.S. team and banged on the ground-floor apartment belonging to the team coaches.[35] He awoke the American track coach Bill Bowerman, who alerted the German police. Bowerman called for the U.S. Marines to come and protect American Jewish Olympians swimmer Mark Spitz and javelin thrower Bill Schmidt.[36] Ladany was the first person to spread the alert as to the attack, and was one of only five Israeli team members to escape. Weinberg and 10 other Israeli Olympic athletes and coaches were kidnapped and killed by the terrorists.[7][4][8][15][30]

Several television, radio, and newspaper reports listed Ladany as one of those killed.[12] One headline stated: "Ladany Could Not Escape his Fate in Germany for a Second Time".[12] Ladany recalled later:

The impact did not hit me at the time, when we were in Munich. It was when we arrived back in Israel. At the airport in Lod there was a huge crowd – maybe 20,000, people – and each one of us, the survivors, stood by one of the coffins on the runway. Some friends came up to me and tried to kiss me and hug me as if I was almost a ghost that came back alive. It was then that I really grasped what had happened and the emotion hit me.[12]

Three Black September members survived and were arrested at a Munich prison, but the West German authorities decided to release them the following month in exchange for the hostages of hijacked Lufthansa Flight 615[37][38] Two of the released Black September members were later killed, as were others who organized the Munich massacre, during a campaign of assassinations by the Israeli Mossad.[14][37] In 1992, speaking of the massacre, Ladany said: "It's with me all the time, and I remember every detail".[39] He visits the graves of his murdered teammates in Tel Aviv every year, on September 6.[40]

In 2012, the International Olympic Committee decided to not hold a minute of silence before the start of the 2012 Olympic Games, to honor the 11 Israeli Olympians who were killed 40 years prior. Jacques Rogge, the IOC President, said it would be "inappropriate". Speaking of the decision, Ladany commented: "I do not understand. I do not understand, and I do not accept it."[14]

In September 2022 he returned to Munich, Germany for the commemorations of the Israeli deaths, at the Olympic Village and Furstenfeldbruck airfield, where he wore the same Israeli Olympic team blazer he wore in 1972.[2]

Later career

[edit]

Ladany returned to competition two months later, against the wishes of the Israeli track and field authorities. The specialist in ultra long distance walking competed in the 1972 World Championships, in Lugano, Switzerland.[41] He won the gold medal in the 100-km walk,[2] in a time of 9:31:00.[7][8][15][42]

At the 1973 Maccabiah Games, he won the 20-km and 50-km walks.[15][24] In 1976, Ladany set the U.S. record in the 75-kilometer walk for the second year in a row.[43] He became the first person to win both the American Open and American Masters (40 years and over) 75-kilometer walking championships.[15] He repeated the feat in 1977 and 1981 (by which time the event had become a 100-km race).[15]

He won the Israeli national walking championship 28 times from 1963 to 1988.[4] He won the U.S. national walking championship six times (from 1973 to 1981; including the 75-km championships in 1974–77, and the 100-km title in 1974), won the Belgian national walking championship twice (1971 and 1972), won the national walking championship in Switzerland (1972), and won the South Africa national walking championship (1975).[15] His personal best in the 50-kilometer walk is 4:17:06 (1972).[7] He has continued to compete with considerable success at the masters level into his seventies.[7] In 2006, he became the first 70-year-old to walk 100 miles in under 24 hours, setting a world record in Ohio of 21 hours, 45 minutes, 34 seconds.[31][44]

In 2012, at the age of 75, he was still competing in 35 events a year, and claimed to walk "[...] a minimum of 15 kilometers a day", and participates in "[...] a four-day, 300-kilometer walk from Paris to Tubize, near Brussels."[4][18][3]

On every birthday he walks his age in kilometers, so on his birthday in 2012 he went on a 76-km walk in Israel's southern Negev desert.[14] After reaching age 80 he elected to cut the distance, walking half his years to celebrate.[2]

He estimates he has walked 6,000–7,000 miles a year, for a lifetime total of over half a million miles.[45] In his career, Ladany has never had a coach.[46] When asked what he enjoyed most about walking, he answered "Finishing".[47] Ladany completed 83 km on his birthday in 2019, but was unable to do 84 in 2020 due to COVID-19 pandemic.[48]

Academic career

[edit]

In his academic life, Ladany was a Lecturer of at the Tel Aviv University Graduate School of Business and, for over three decades, a Professor of Industrial Engineering and Management at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, where he was formerly Chairman of the department and is now emeritus professor.[4][7][11][15][19] He has had visiting appointments at Columbia University, University of California, Irvine, Georgia Tech, Emory University, Rutgers University, Baruch College of the City University of New York, Temple University, University of Cape Town, Science Center Berlin, Singapore University, and CSIRO (Melbourne).[4][19]

He focuses on quality control and applied statistics.[41] He has also authored over a dozen scholarly books and 110 scientific articles.[7][11][15][31] He holds U.S. patents for eight mechanical designs.[4][10]

Philately

[edit]

Ladany is a philatelist. His collection of telegraph stamps and associated material was sold by Spink & Son in Lugano in 2015.[49]

Autobiography

[edit]

In 1997, his autobiography was published in Hebrew, entitled The Walk to the Olympics.[7][15] In 2008, it was published in English, entitled King of the Road: The Autobiography of an Israeli Scientist and a World Record-Holding Race Walker (Gefen Publishing).[4] In 2012, a biography was written about him in Italian by Andrea Schiavon, and published under the title: Cinque cerchi e una stellaShaul Ladany, da Bergen-Belsen a Monaco '72 (ADD Editore, Torino).[50]

Hall of fame and awards

[edit]

In 2007, Ladany was awarded the Pierre de Coubertin Medal for outstanding service to the Olympic Movement.[3][25][51] He was cited as a special person with "unusual outstanding sports achievements during a span covering over four decades."[25]

Ladany said he would set up a 10,000 Olympic race-walking fund, and offer 1,000₪ to any Israeli who can complete the 50-kilometer race in less than five hours.[25]

In 2008, the Israeli Industrial Engineering Association awarded Ladany with its Life Achievement award.[3] He was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2012.[8]

In 2023 the Jupiter Trojan asteroid with the temporary designation 2001 UV209 was named (247341) Shaulladany.[52]

Selected publications

[edit]

Philately

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Shaul Ladany (born 2 ) is an Israeli racewalker, survivor, and two-time Olympian who escaped the Palestinian terrorist attack on the Israeli at the Olympics. ![Shaul Ladany in racewalking attire][float-right]
Born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, to a Jewish family, Ladany endured internment in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp as a child during World War II, emerging with his family after Allied liberation in 1945. After immigrating to Israel, he took up racewalking, competing for the country at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics and the 1972 Munich Games, where he participated in the 50 kilometres walk event shortly after the Black September attack that killed 11 Israeli team members; Ladany survived by virtue of being housed separately from the targeted athletes.
Ladany's athletic featured endurance feats including the still-standing in the 50-mile race walk, set in at 7 hours, 23 minutes, and 50 seconds, along with a in the 100 km event at the 1972 Championships. He amassed 28 Israeli national titles, five golds at the Maccabiah Games, and multiple victories in international competitions, while later earning a PhD in business administration from Columbia University and serving as a professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. In recognition of his contributions to sport and the Olympic movement, he received the Pierre de Coubertin Medal in 2007.

Early Life and Holocaust Experience

Family Origins and Pre-War Childhood

Shaul Ladany was born on 1936 in , , into a middle-class Jewish with cultural ties to the former Austro-Hungarian Empire, where his parents and grandparents had been born and raised as Hungarian speakers. His father, a chemical engineer and patent attorney originally from Novi Sad, and his mother, who had studied law, provided a comfortable upbringing in a spacious villa shared with Ladany's grandparents. By age five, Ladany exhibited early linguistic aptitude, speaking Hungarian at home with his parents, German with his nanny, and Serbian in external interactions, reflecting the multilingual environment of interwar Yugoslavia's Jewish communities. This period of relative stability in Belgrade ended abruptly with the Axis powers' invasion on 6 April 1941, when German aircraft bombed the city, prompting the family's flight southward.

Deportation and Internment in Bergen-Belsen

In 1941, following the German bombing of Belgrade, Shaul Ladany's family fled to Budapest, Hungary, where they sought refuge amid escalating persecution of Jews. By 1944, as Nazi deportations intensified in Hungary, Ladany's parents attempted to conceal their eight-year-old son in a monastery, but the family was apprehended and included among approximately 1,685 Jews selected for a purported "rescue" transport organized by Zionist leader Rudolf Kasztner. The group, including Ladany, his parents, and two siblings—totaling five family members—boarded a train in Budapest on June 30, 1944, under promises of relocation to Switzerland in exchange for ransom payments. However, the SS diverted the train to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in northern Germany, where the passengers were held as hostages in a special section known as the "Kasztner compound" or "star camp," isolated from the main prisoner population but subjected to severe restrictions and uncertainty. Arrival occurred in early July 1944, marking the beginning of roughly six months of internment for the family. Bergen-Belsen, originally established as a POW camp and later repurposed for Jews and political prisoners, deteriorated into a site of rampant disease and starvation by mid-1944, with over 50,000 deaths recorded there by liberation, primarily from typhus and malnutrition. Ladany, then aged eight, endured the camp's harsh conditions alongside his immediate family, though the Kasztner group's relative isolation spared them some of the worst abuses faced by other inmates; nevertheless, negotiations for their release dragged on amid Allied advances and Nazi demands for further payments. The family's grandparents had been deported separately to Auschwitz, where they perished. Internment ended on January 21, 1945, when the Kasztner group was finally released following protracted ransom negotiations and transported first to occupied and then to , averting the fate of many Bergen-Belsen prisoners who succumbed during the war's final months. This episode represented one of the Holocaust's complex exchanges, where partial exemptions came at the of immense trauma and the of guaranteed escape.

Liberation and Immediate Aftermath

Ladany and his , as part of the approximately 1,684 Jews on the that departed on June 30, 1944, arrived at Bergen-Belsen on July 9 and were interned in a special "exchange" section of the camp reserved for potential or swap negotiations. Despite initial promises of safe passage to neutral , they endured months of confinement amid deteriorating conditions, including and disease, though the privileged status of the group spared them the worst atrocities faced by general prisoners. On December 7, 1944, Ladany, then aged 8, and his parents were among the 1,354 remaining members of the group released through ongoing negotiations led by Rudolf Kasztner, who facilitated their transport by train to Switzerland, where they arrived shortly thereafter. This release predated the British Army's liberation of the main Bergen-Belsen camp on April 15, 1945, by several months. In Switzerland, the family received temporary refuge, but with the war's end in May 1945, they returned to Belgrade, Yugoslavia, their pre-war home, where Ladany resumed childhood amid post-war instability and the loss of extended relatives during the Holocaust. Economic hardships and political upheaval under the emerging communist regime prompted their decision to emigrate; in December 1948, they departed for Israel aboard the ship Kibbutz Galuyot, arriving in the newly independent state and settling initially in a transit camp near Tel Aviv. This period marked the beginning of Ladany's adaptation to life outside internment, though he later recounted the psychological scars of camp survival, including vivid memories of hunger and mortality, which influenced his resilient outlook without leading to formal therapy or public testimony until decades later.

Immigration to Israel and Formative Years

Arrival and Adaptation in Israel

Following the end of , Ladany's family returned to Yugoslavia amid ongoing instability and antisemitism, prompting their decision to emigrate to the newly established State of in 1948. At age 12 upon arrival, Ladany faced significant educational disruptions from , having completed only about five months of what should have been eight years of elementary schooling. The family settled in , where Ladany completed his high school despite the challenges of integrating into a nascent marked by economic and mass . As a young immigrant, or oleh, he adapted by learning Hebrew and navigating the communal absorption processes typical for and Eastern European Jews arriving during Israel's founding years, which often involved temporary camps or shared housing before permanent settlement. Enlistment in the Israel Defense Forces followed high school, marking a key step in his assimilation; during military service in his late teens and early twenties, he participated in endurance training that later influenced his athletic pursuits, and he fought in the 1956 Sinai Campaign. This period of adaptation underscored Ladany's resilience, transitioning from wartime trauma and displacement to contributing to Israel's early state-building efforts through mandatory national service, while laying the groundwork for his future in education and sports.

Education and Early Professional Development

Ladany immigrated to Israel in 1948 at age 12, following the establishment of the state. He completed his secondary education there before pursuing higher studies in engineering. At the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, he earned a BSc and an MSc in mechanical engineering, focusing on technical disciplines essential for industrial applications. Complementing his , Ladany obtained a in from the , bridging technical expertise with managerial principles. This interdisciplinary positioned him for roles in during Israel's post-independence , where he applied analytical methods to production and operations challenges. In his early professional years, amid balancing emerging athletic pursuits, Ladany contributed to Israel's burgeoning industrial sector, leveraging his degrees to address practical problems in manufacturing and systems optimization before advancing to advanced research and academia. These formative experiences honed his approach to operations research, which later defined his scholarly output.

Athletic Career in Racewalking

Entry into Competitive Walking and Initial Successes

Ladany began his athletic endeavors in Israel as a marathon runner in 1956, competing in road races amid the nascent development of organized sports in the young state. Recognizing the physical demands and his endurance strengths, he shifted to race walking in the early 1960s, a discipline requiring strict form with one foot always in contact with the ground to avoid disqualification. This transition aligned with his self-directed training regimen, where he practiced long distances independently, honing technique through repetitive marches that built both speed and stamina. In 1963, Ladany claimed his inaugural Israeli national championship in race walking, marking the start of his dominance in the event. He went on to secure 28 Israeli titles in race walking from 1963 to 1988, often finishing first in distances ranging from 20 to 50 kilometers. His consistent victories earned him the moniker "King of the Marches" in the Israeli press, reflecting his unchallenged supremacy in domestic competitions during this formative phase. These early achievements established Ladany as Israel's premier race walker, paving the way for international selection. By the mid-1960s, his national successes had positioned him for broader exposure, including multi-day walking events that tested his resilience over extended periods. His self-reliant approach to training and rapid accrual of titles underscored a pragmatic adaptation to the sport's technical and endurance requirements, setting records in Israeli events that foreshadowed his global performances.

1968 Mexico City Olympics

Ladany competed in the men's 50 kilometres walk at the in , marking his debut in the . The event took place on , , at the , starting as a mass-start race among 36 participants from 19 nations. He finished in 24th place with a time of 5 hours, 1 minute, and 6 seconds, behind the winner, East Germany's Christoph Höhne, who completed the in 4:20:13.6. As Israel's representative in the , Ladany's came at age 32, shortly after transitioning from marathon running to race walking in his mid-20s and earning his first Israeli national in 1963. At that stage, he had not yet reached his competitive peak, which would manifest in subsequent records and stronger placings. The Mexico City altitude of over 2,200 meters presented endurance challenges for all competitors, contributing to slower overall times compared to sea-level conditions.

1972 Munich Olympics and Terrorist Attack

Ladany represented Israel in the men's 50 km race walk at the in , , on , 1972. He completed the event in 19th place with a time of 4 hours, , and 38.6 seconds. Two days later, in the early morning hours of , 1972, eight Palestinian militants from the infiltrated the and attacked the Israeli delegation's apartments at 31 Connollystrasse, killing wrestling coach and wrestler in the initial . Residing in Apartment 2, Ladany was awakened around 4:30 a.m. by a roommate who reported the murders in the adjacent apartment. He quickly put on sneakers over his pajamas, threw a training outfit on top, and escaped through the rear of the building with another teammate, crossing an open lawn in plain view of the terrorists. Ladany then proceeded to Apartment 5 to alert Israeli team official Shmuel Lalkin, while observing a terrorist deny medical aid to injured hostages. The attackers took nine remaining Israelis hostage, demanding the release of 234 Palestinian prisoners held in Israel and two militants in West Germany. A botched rescue operation at Fürstenfeldbruck airbase later that day resulted in the deaths of all nine hostages, five terrorists, and one West German police officer. The terrorists had bypassed Apartment 2 after Ladany's group fled, initially assuming it empty, which spared the occupants inside from immediate confrontation. Ladany was one of five Israeli athletes who survived the massacre, which claimed the lives of 11 members of the delegation in total. The suspended the for 24 hours before resuming them, but the surviving Israeli athletes, including Ladany, were evacuated to amid heightened concerns. Ladany later recalled disbelief at the attack's in such a setting, stating, "We didn’t believe something like this could happen." Despite the trauma, he competed and won the 100 km in race walking less than a month later on October 1, 1972.

Records, Later Competitions, and Retirement

In 1972, Ladany established the in the 50-mile race walk, completing the in 7:23:50, a mark that surpassed previous benchmarks and stood as a testament to his endurance capabilities. That same year, he secured the in the 100 km race walk at the World Championships, finishing in 9:31:00, further solidifying his status among elite ultra-distance walkers. Throughout his career, Ladany amassed 28 Israeli national titles in race walking, including in events such as the 50 km . Following the 1972 Munich Olympics, Ladany maintained a competitive edge by participating in U.S. championships, where he emerged as the top walker on five occasions between 1973 and 1981. He claimed victories in the 75 km event from 1974 to 1977 and the 100 km title in 1974, demonstrating sustained performance into his mid-40s despite the physical demands of the sport. These achievements highlighted his adaptability and resilience in international ultra-walking circuits beyond Olympic cycles. Ladany retired from competitive race walking in the early , transitioning focus toward his academic while maintaining personal fitness through walking into advanced age. His post-retirement regimen included rigorous daily walks, underscoring a lifelong commitment to physical honed during his athletic prime.

Academic and Professional Contributions

Career at Technion and Industrial Engineering Expertise

Ladany commenced his higher education at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, earning a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering in 1960 and a Master of Science in the same field in 1961. These early degrees provided foundational knowledge in engineering principles, including mechanics and systems design, which informed his subsequent specialization in industrial engineering. During this period, he also engaged in practical work, such as employment with IBM Israel, applying mechanical engineering concepts to computing and manufacturing technologies. Advancing his expertise, Ladany obtained a Ph.D. in from in , focusing on and optimization methodologies. His professional career emphasized quantitative models for in production, services, and , often integrating probabilistic analysis and simulation. At , where he served as a full professor and department chairman in Industrial Engineering and Management from the 1970s until his emeritus status, Ladany authored over 120 scholarly papers and more than a dozen books on topics including inventory control, pricing strategies, and scheduling in tourism and sports events. Notable contributions include algorithms for optimal lot sizing under credit terms and efficient cruise itineraries to maximize revenue. Ladany's work extended to practical innovations, holding U.S. patents for eight mechanical designs related to and enhancements. His bridged theoretical optimization with real-world applications, such as models for event and facility utilization, reflecting a causal approach to improving system performance through data-driven interventions rather than assumptions. This body of work, spanning over three decades, underscored his emphasis on empirical validation and rigorous modeling in industrial contexts.

Key Publications and Research Focus

Ladany's academic research primarily focused on industrial and , with key emphases in , , and applied for and decision . He developed models for optimizing control charts to monitor production defects, accounting for costs of false alarms, inspections, and disruptions. Similarly, his work addressed efficient sampling plans for limit gaging, balancing expenses against defect detection accuracy in . These contributions advanced practical tools for industrial efficiency, often integrating Bayesian decision theory to enhance reliability under uncertainty. A distinctive strand of Ladany's scholarship applied operations research methodologies to sports performance optimization, establishing him as a pioneer in this interdisciplinary field. He formulated strategies for events like pole-vaulting, deriving optimal starting heights to maximize expected clearance based on success probabilities at incremental levels. In , his analyses prescribed phase allocations in the to achieve target distances, resolving debates on hop-to-step-to-jump ratios through probabilistic modeling. Other studies extended to golf, maximizing qualification probabilities in tournaments via shot selection under risk, and to long jumping, evaluating aiming lines for utility maximization. This sports-oriented research, initially a sidelight, positioned him as a global leader in the domain. Ladany's prolific output encompassed over 110 peer-reviewed papers and 13 scholarly books, including Management Science Applications to Leisure-Time Operations, which integrated OR techniques for recreational and sporting contexts. He also secured eight U.S. patents for mechanical innovations, reflecting his expertise in practical . His publications, spanning journals like Operations Research and Computers & Industrial Engineering, emphasized empirical validation and real-world applicability over theoretical .

Intellectual and Cultural Pursuits

Philatelic Expertise and Collections

Shaul Ladany developed a deep interest in philately, specializing in the niche field of telegraph, telegram, and telephone stamps from around the world. His collection encompassed comprehensive holdings of these items, often featuring rare and historical specimens from diverse regions, including Yugoslavia (1918–1932 issues), Latin America (circa 1890), the Netherlands, and ocean telegrams from maritime sources. These materials highlighted the technical and postal history aspects of early communication infrastructure, reflecting Ladany's methodical approach informed by his background in industrial engineering and operations research. Ladany's philatelic pursuits extended to applying quantitative analysis, as evidenced by his unpublished doctoral dissertation on maximizing from the sale of postage stamps for philatelic purposes at , which demonstrated an early integration of optimization models to philatelic . This analytical expertise underscored his collections' value, positioning him as a respected figure among specialists; auction houses frequently referred to his holdings as the "magnificent Shaul Ladany Collection," emphasizing their depth and scholarly . Significant portions of his telegraph stamp collection were dispersed through high-profile auctions. Spink & Son sold Part II of the collection in December 2015 as part of their Collectors' Series, featuring worldwide rarities that attracted strong bidder interest. Earlier, Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries included selections from his telegraph stamps in their Sale No. 1133 in July 2016, alongside other specialized postal history material. Posthumously, following Ladany's death in 2023, additional items from his estate, including Canadian specialized stamps and postal history, appeared in Siegel's Sale No. 1130 in 2021 and House of Zion's public auctions in 2024, continuing the legacy of his discerning acquisitions built over decades.

Autobiography and Personal Testimony

Shaul Ladany published his autobiography King of the Road: From Bergen-Belsen to the Olympic Games in English in 2008 through Gefen Publishing House, following an initial Hebrew edition titled The Walk to the Olympics in 1997. The 384-page work chronicles his life from early childhood in amid the 1941 German invasion, through Holocaust internment and survival, postwar immigration to in 1948, emergence as a record-setting racewalker, two Olympic appearances, and the 1972 Munich terrorist attack. In the autobiography, Ladany details his family's flight from to in 1941, internment in the in 1944, and deportation via the to , where, at age eight, he and his parents endured starvation rations and freezing conditions until their release to on December 4, 1944, as part of a negotiated . He emphasizes the improbable survival factors—such as his mother's resourcefulness during a 1941 German bombing in Belgrade that killed neighbors while sparing his family—and contrasts this with the near-total annihilation of 's 70,000 Jews. The narrative extends to his athletic perseverance, framing racewalking as a metaphor for enduring life's adversities, including the loss of extended family in events like the 1942 Ujvidek massacre of 3,000 Jews. Ladany recounts the Munich events of September 5, 1972, in stark detail: having departed the Israeli Olympic Village dormitory early for a training walk, he returned to chaos, observing the Black September terrorists' refusal of medical aid to wrestling coach Moshe Weinberg and weightlifter Yossef Romano, who were killed in the initial assault, before nine others were taken hostage and later executed during a botched rescue. He critiques the Israeli delegation's decision to withdraw from the Games, opting instead to compete and win the 100 km world racewalking championship weeks later in Lugano, Switzerland, as an act of defiance. Complementing the book, Ladany has shared oral testimonies in media and institutional archives, underscoring themes of resilience without embellishment. In a 2022 ESPN interview commemorating the Munich massacre's 50th anniversary, he described the Holocaust's formative scars—such as sharing meager food portions at Bergen-Belsen—and the Munich night's auditory horrors of gunfire echoing his wartime memories, while affirming his refusal to "retreat" from either trauma. He also recorded a detailed video testimony for the USC Shoah Foundation, focusing on family persecution under Nazi occupation, including the occupation of Budapest and camp conditions, preserved for educational purposes with support from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. These accounts, drawn from primary recollection, highlight causal contingencies in survival rather than ideological narratives.

Awards, Recognition, and Legacy

Athletic Honors and Inductions

Ladany amassed 28 Israeli national championships in racewalking across various distances during his competitive career spanning the 1950s to 1980s. He secured five gold medals at the Maccabiah Games, including three in 1969 (3 km, 10 km, and 50 km walks). In 1972, he claimed the gold medal in the 100 km event at the inaugural International Race Walking Championships (recognized as the world championship), finishing in 9 hours, 31 minutes. That same year, on May 7 in New Jersey, Ladany established the still-standing world record in the 50-mile race walk with a time of 7 hours, 23 minutes, 50 seconds. He also dominated the U.S. national championships, winning the top racewalking honors five times between 1973 and 1981. In recognition of his contributions to the Olympic movement, Ladany received the Pierre de Coubertin in 2007 from the , honoring his resilience and promotion of Olympic ideals following his experiences at the 1972 . Ladany was inducted into the International Jewish Hall of Fame in 2012, with the held in 2013 at the in to align with the . This honor acknowledged his status as one of the premier racewalkers of the 1960s and 1970s, including his Olympic participations and world records.

Broader Impact on Israeli Society and Jewish Resilience

Shaul Ladany's life as a survivor of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp during the Holocaust and the Black September terrorist attack at the 1972 Munich Olympics positioned him as a living testament to Jewish endurance against genocidal and jihadist threats. Having endured internment from age eight until liberation via the Kastner train in 1945, Ladany immigrated to Israel in 1948, where he channeled his experiences into athletic excellence, academic pursuits, and professional innovation, embodying the Zionist ethos of renewal amid adversity. His ability to compete internationally for Israel, including setting a world record in the 50-mile race walk on May 26, 1968, in Tel Aviv (7 hours, 23 minutes, 50 seconds), symbolized the nation's refusal to be defined by victimhood, instead asserting presence and prowess on the global stage despite ongoing hostility. In Israeli society, Ladany's trajectory from Holocaust orphan to Technion professor of industrial engineering reinforced the societal narrative of resilience forged through state-building and self-reliance. He authored over 120 publications, secured eight U.S. patents for mechanical designs, and mentored generations in optimization and systems analysis, contributing to Israel's emergence as a hub of technological and engineering advancement—fields critical to national defense and economy. This integration of personal fortitude with collective progress highlighted how survivors like Ladany, who won 28 Israeli national race-walking titles, bolstered the cultural emphasis on physical and intellectual discipline as bulwarks against existential perils. His public testimonies, including in the 2017 DW documentary Shaul Ladany - Running for his Life, educated on the causal links between unchecked antisemitism and violence, urging vigilance without succumbing to fatalism. Ladany's legacy amplified Jewish resilience by bridging Holocaust memory with contemporary security challenges, as seen in his 2022 reflections on the Munich massacre's 50th anniversary, where he critiqued inadequate protections while affirming Israel's right to self-defense. Inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2012, he inspired Israeli youth to view survival not as passive endurance but active defiance, aligning with the broader societal shift toward proactive measures against terrorism post-Munich, including enhanced athlete security protocols adopted by the Israel Defense Forces and Olympic committees. His death on March 25, 2023, at age 87, prompted tributes underscoring his role in sustaining the morale of a nation repeatedly targeted, with figures noting his unyielding spirit as a model for confronting hybrid threats from state and non-state actors.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.