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16 Jewish and Israeli athletes to watch in the 2026 Winter Olympics, from the ice rink to the alpine slopes
(JTA) — All eyes might be on Israel’s unlikely bobsled squad, making its first appearance at the Winter Olympics, but there are actually a slew of Jewish and Israeli athletes headed to Milan.
The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics kick off on Feb. 6, followed by the Paralympics exactly one month later.
Jewish and Israeli athletes enjoyed historic success at the most recent Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris in 2024, with a combined 36 athletes taking home 31 total medals between the two competitions. Israel’s seven Olympic medals were the country’s most in a single tournament.
Now sports fans worldwide turn their attention to Italy, where Israel will send nine athletes, its second-largest delegation in its ninth Winter Olympics appearance. A number of Team USA stars also hail from Jewish backgrounds, including three members of the men’s ice hockey squad.
Here are some of the biggest Jewish names to watch when the Olympic torch is lit in Milan.
Is there a Jewish or Israeli Olympian we should keep an eye on? Shoot us a message at sports@jta.org!
A.J. Edelman and the Israeli bobsled team
For A.J. Edelman, the 2026 Games represent a culmination of a 12-year effort to build an Israeli bobsled program worthy of Olympic competition. In his words, this is Israel’s “Shul Runnings” moment — a nod to the 1993 movie “Cool Runnings” about the pathbreaking Jamaican bobsled team that made it to the Olympics in 1988.
Israel Bobsled Team is heading to the Olympics.
For Israel “impossible” is just something we do. Every day.
4390 days–12 years ago, a dream was born. A mission. Catapult Jewish and Israeli Winter Sport to a new level through the qualification of an Israeli Olympic Bobsled… pic.twitter.com/NoHkMjvo4o— AJ Edelman, OLY (@realajedelman) January 22, 2026
Edelman, a Boston native (and younger brother of comedian Alex Edelman) who made aliyah in 2016, is the first Israeli athlete to qualify for the Olympics in two different sports, having competed in the 2018 Games in skeleton. (The sport is known as bobsleigh in international competitions.)
Edelman will be joined by Menachem Chen, Ward Fawarsy and Omer Katz (plus Uri Zisman as an alternate) as Israel makes its Olympic debut in bobsled. The team is notable for two reasons beyond its sport: Edelman believes he’s also the first Orthodox Jew to compete in the Winter Olympics, and Fawarsy is likely the first Druze competitor.
Jared Firestone, Israel’s “Jewish Jet”
Miami-born Jared Firestone will compete for Israel in the skeleton competition, making his Olympic debut at age 35. He discovered the sport as part of his recovery from a transient ischemic attack, also known as a “mini-stroke,” during his first semester of law school at Yeshiva University’s Cardozo school.
Firestone became the first Israeli to win gold in an Olympic-discipline sliding sport competition, at the North America Cup in Lake Placid. In 2025, he was the first Israeli finalist at the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation World Championships.
The Jewish day school alum writes on his website that “my lifelong dream has been to represent Israel at the Olympic Games,” fueled in part by his 2008 experience with March of the Living and 2012 Birthright trip to Israel. He and Edelman cofounded Advancing Jewish Athletics, a nonprofit organization that supports Jewish athletes.
Aerin Frankel, star goalie for Team USA
Boston Fleet goaltender Aerin Frankel has made a name for herself as a star in the ascendant Professional Women’s Hockey League. But the 26-year-old turns it up another notch in international play.
Frankel was Team USA’s starting goalie for the Women’s World Championships from 2023 to 2025, leading the U.S. squad to gold medals in 2023 and 2025 and silver in 2024. She was also on the U.S. roster for its 2021 and 2022 silver medal runs. During the 2023 tournament, Frankel became the first U.S. women’s goaltender in 26 years to start five consecutive games at an Olympics or World Championship.
Known as the “Green Monster,” a nod to Fenway Park’s iconic left-field wall, Frankel makes her Olympic debut this year.
The Hughes brothers, and Boston’s other Jewish goaltender
On the men’s side, Team USA will feature a trio of Jewish ice hockey stars all making their Olympic debuts: brothers Quinn and Jack Hughes and Jeremy Swayman.
Quinn Hughes, 26, a defenseman for the Minnesota Wild, was the 2024 winner of the NHL’s James Norris Memorial Trophy for the league’s best defenseman. He was traded to the Wild (for Israeli-American Zeev Buium) after several seasons as the captain of the Vancouver Canucks. He has played for various U.S. teams dating back to 2015, highlighted by a gold medal at the 2017 World U18 Championships.
Middle brother Jack Hughes, 24, is a star center for the New Jersey Devils, where he plays alongside youngest brother Luke Hughes. Jack, the first overall pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft, is a three-time All-Star and was named tournament MVP of the 2018 World U18 Championship. He and Quinn have played together on multiple U.S. teams. Their mother, Ellen Weinberg-Hughes, was herself a hockey star and is a member of the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
Swayman, 27, was a star at the University of Maine before joining the Boston Bruins in 2021. The Alaska native co-won the William M. Jennings Trophy in 2022-23 for allowing the fewest goals in the NHL and was named an All-Star in 2024. Swayman, whose father is Jewish, had a bar mitzvah as a teen.
Attila Mihály Kertész, Israel’s first Olympic cross-country skier
It’s fitting that Attila Mihály Kertész is a cross-country skier, given the circuitous route he took to his first Olympics.
The 37-year-old was born and raised in Hungary, lives in Thailand and works as a veterinarian. He didn’t begin training until 2018. And now, he’s Israel’s first Olympic cross-country skier.
Kertész, whose wife is Jewish, also endured a long path to Israeli citizenship, a process that was interrupted by COVID, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel. He and his family finally completed the process in the summer of 2024.
“It’s historic to be the first [Israeli] cross-country skier,” Kertész told the Times of Israel. “I thought, OK, this is something I can give back to my nation.”
Emery Lehman, U.S. speed skater
The elder statesman of the U.S. Jewish Olympic cohort, Chicago native Emery Lehman, 29, returns for his fourth straight Winter Olympics. He won a bronze medal in Beijing in 2022. He has also won several gold medals at international speed skating competitions.
Lehman, whose mother has previously worked for the American Friends of the Hebrew University of Israel, first began speed skating as a child to improve his ice hockey skills. He became a national champion at 13 years old and qualified for his first Olympics, the 2014 Sochi Games, at 17.
In Italy, Lehman will compete in the 1500-meter race and the team pursuit.
Kayle Osborne, Canadian ice hockey goaltender
New York Sirens goalie Kayle Osborne completes the quintet of Jewish ice hockey players headed to Milan.
The 23-year-old Ontario native almost played for Canada at the Maccabiah Games as a teenager before going on to a standout career as a goalie at Colgate University, where she was a finalist for the NCAA’s Women’s Hockey Goalie of the Year honor.
She is making her Olympic debut.
Mariia Seniuk, Israeli figure skating champion
Mariia Seniuk, 20, is a Russian-Israeli figure skater fresh off her fourth consecutive Israeli national championship in singles skating.
Seniuk placed 16th overall at the 2025 World Championships in Boston to clinch an Olympic quota for Israel.
Noa and Barnabás Szőllős, Israel’s “ski siblings”
Alpine skiing siblings Noa and Barnabas Szőllős are returning for their second straight Winter Olympics. Noa, 22, became the first Israeli athlete to medal at a winter Olympic event when she won a silver and a bronze at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics.
Barnabás, 27, finished sixth in combined downhill in Beijing in 2022.
The third Szőllős sibling, Benjamin, also competes in alpine skiing for Israel. Their father, Peter, was a professional skier for their home country of Hungary, where the siblings still live, before becoming an Israeli citizen.
The post 16 Jewish and Israeli athletes to watch in the 2026 Winter Olympics, from the ice rink to the alpine slopes appeared first on The Forward.
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Amid antisemitic attacks, Trump has forced an impossible choice on American synagogues
The Thursday attack on Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan, did not occur in a vacuum.
In the past few months, shots were fired at three congregations in Toronto; an explosion rocked a synagogue in Belgium; and an arsonist caused massive damage to Beth Israel Congregation in Mississippi. Antisemitic incidents in the United States have reached historic highs. The threat is real, it is escalating, and American Jews know it.
Which is why the federal government’s decision to use this moment in history to force Jewish communities to choose between their own safety and that of immigrants is so unforgivable.
That choice is being created as part of the government’s Nonprofit Security Grant Program, which under President Donald Trump has instituted troubling new changes.
The program was established in 2004 to help houses of worship pay for cameras, barriers, armed guards and alarm systems, then expanded after the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre in 2018. It has perhaps never mattered more than it does right now. It provides, quite literally, life-saving money. The demand for grants vastly outpaces the supply, with thousands of organizations competing for a fraction of the security funds they need.
Now, those funds come with new strings attached.
Beginning in 2025, the Department of Homeland Security attached sweeping ideological conditions to new security grants. Recipients of new awards must cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations, and must also agree not to “operate any programs that advance or promote DEI, DEIA, or discriminatory equity ideology.” They additionally must not run any aid program which “benefits illegal immigrants or incentivizes illegal immigration.”
When asked to clarify what those conditions mean in practice — whether a synagogue that declares itself a sanctuary for refugees would be disqualified, or whether a congregation offering programming for Jews of color or LGBTQ+ Jews would run afoul of the anti-DEI clause — the federal government’s answer has been months of contradictory guidance and confusion.
The terrifying potential consequences of that muddle were thrown into sharp relief by Thursday’s attack.
A man armed with a rifle rammed his truck through the doors of Temple Israel, driving down a hallway before being killed by the synagogue’s security staff. Thankfully, no congregants were hurt, and the children in the preschool run by the synagogue all made it home safely.
Many congregations do not have the independent resources to support security protocols as effective as Temple Israel’s proved to be. Instead, they rely on the government to help bridge the gap.
But under Trump’s second administration, security funding — the money that pays for the tools that may one day save lives — is now a lever to use to force political compliance.
This is of particular significance for Reform Judaism, the largest Jewish denomination in the U.S. and that to which Temple Israel belongs. The movement’s commitment to welcoming the stranger, hachnasat orchim — stemming from the commandment to love the stranger, repeated no fewer than 36 times in the Torah — is core to its identity. It is no coincidence that many Reform congregations have declared themselves sanctuaries for refugees.
And it’s of particular significance because antisemitic violence is often linked to anti-immigrant sentiment. The deadliest act of antisemitic violence in U.S. history, the 2018 Pittsburgh synagogue shooting, was motivated by hatred toward immigrants, and toward Jewish programs that aid them.
The Trump administration’s demand that liberal American Jews choose between a foundational Jewish value and basic safety from violence is heartbreaking. One anonymous rabbi described the dilemma with devastating clarity to JTA: “Money is being given to us on condition that we violate a specific mitzvah. I don’t see how we can possibly accept that money.”
Rabbi Jill Maderer in Philadelphia put it even more bluntly, saying “Jewish safety requires inclusive democracy and inclusive democracy requires Jewish safety. We do not comply so we will not apply.”
These are communities under armed threat — as Thursday clearly reminded us — forced to choose between their physical safety and their moral integrity. That is a choice that no American religious community should ever have to make. The government’s obligation to protect its citizens, especially its most targeted minorities, must not come with an ideological price tag.
What makes this especially galling is the timing. A government shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, born out of a political standoff over immigration enforcement, is currently halting the review of security grant applications. Synagogues that applied for funding months ago are waiting for approvals that may not come.
They are waiting, in many cases, to find out whether the security upgrades that might have made the difference under circumstances like those that unfolded in Michigan will be funded or not.
There is a word for demanding that a persecuted minority community abandon its values in exchange for protection: extortion. The Trump administration would no doubt dispute that framing. After all, the administration claims to care deeply about Jewish safety. Thursday’s attack makes clear that it is not enough for the administration to make that claim; it must prove its commitment through action.
It must remove the political conditions from the Nonprofit Security Grant Program. It must let houses of worship be what they are: sanctuaries, not instruments of federal policy.
The post Amid antisemitic attacks, Trump has forced an impossible choice on American synagogues appeared first on The Forward.
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‘For As Long As Necessary’: Katz Says Campaign Against Iran Entering Decisive Stage
Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz and his Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias make statements to the press, at the Ministry of Defense in Athens Greece, Jan. 20, 2026. Photo: REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki
i24 News – Israel Katz said Saturday that the confrontation with Iran had entered a “decisive phase,” as US and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets continued and regional tensions escalated.
Speaking after a security assessment at Israel’s defense headquarters alongside Eyal Zamir, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, and senior military and intelligence officials, the Israeli defense minister said the campaign against the Islamic Republic would continue “for as long as necessary.”
“The global and regional struggle against Iran, led by American President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, is intensifying and entering its decisive phase,” Katz said.
Katz also praised US strikes on Kharg Island, a key Iranian oil hub, describing them as a “severe blow” to the Iranian regime. He said the attacks were an appropriate response to Iranian threats against the strategic Strait of Hormuz and to what he called Tehran’s attempts to pressure the international community.
At the same time, Katz said the Israeli Air Force was continuing a “powerful wave of attacks” against targets in Tehran and other parts of Iran.
He accused the Iranian leadership of using “regional and global terrorism” and strategic blackmail in an effort to deter Israel and the United States from pursuing their military campaign, warning that such actions would be met with a “strong and uncompromising response.”
Katz added that the outcome of the conflict would ultimately depend on the Iranian population. “Only the Iranian people can put an end to this situation through a determined struggle, until the overthrow of the terrorist regime and the salvation of Iran,” he said.
According to the minister, the confrontation now pits the Iranian regime’s determination to survive against growing military pressure from Israel and its allies.
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Trump Rejects Efforts to Launch Iran Ceasefire Talks, Sources Say
US President Donald Trump speaks on the day he honors reigning Major League Soccer (MLS) champion Inter Miami CF players and team officials with an event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, US, March 5, 2026. Photo: REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
President Donald Trump’s administration has rebuffed efforts by Middle Eastern allies to start diplomatic negotiations aimed at ending the Iran war that started two weeks ago with a massive US-Israeli air assault, according to three sources familiar with the efforts.
Iran, for its part, has rejected the possibility of any ceasefire until US and Israeli strikes end, two senior Iranian sources told Reuters, adding that several countries had been trying to mediate an end to the conflict.
The lack of interest from Washington and Tehran suggests both sides are digging in for an extended conflict, even as the widening war inflicts civilian casualties and Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz sends oil prices soaring.
US strikes on Iran’s Kharg Island, the country’s main oil export hub, on Friday night underscored Trump’s determination to press ahead with his military assault. Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has vowed to keep the Strait of Hormuz shut and threatened to step up attacks on neighboring countries.
The war has killed more than 2,000 people, mostly in Iran, and created the biggest-ever oil supply disruption as maritime traffic has halted in the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil is transported.
ATTEMPTS TO OPEN LINES OF COMMUNICATION
Oman, which mediated talks before the war, has tried multiple times to open a line of communication, but the White House has made clear it is not interested, according to two sources, who like others in this story were granted anonymity in order to speak freely about diplomatic matters.
A senior White House official confirmed Trump has rebuffed those efforts to start talks and is focused on pressing ahead with the war to further weaken Tehran’s military capabilities.
“He’s not interested in that right now, and we’re going to continue with the mission unabated. Maybe there’s a day, but not right now,” the official said.
During the first week of the war, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform that Iran’s leadership and military were so battered by US-Israeli strikes that they wanted to talk, but that it was “Too Late!” He has a history of shifting foreign policy stances without warning, making it hard to rule out that he might test the waters for restarting diplomacy.
“President Trump said new potential leadership in Iran has indicated they want to talk and eventually will talk. For now, Operation Epic Fury continues unabated,” a second senior White House official said when asked to comment on this story.
The Iranian sources said Tehran has rejected efforts by several countries to negotiate a ceasefire until the US and Israel end their airstrikes and meet Iran’s demands, which include a permanent end to US and Israeli attacks and compensation as part of a ceasefire.
Egypt, which was involved in mediation before the war, has also tried to reopen communications, according to three security and diplomatic sources. While the efforts do not appear to have made progress, they have secured some military restraint from neighboring countries hit by Iran, according to one of the sources.
Egypt’s foreign ministry, the government of Oman and the Iranian government did not respond to requests for comment.
POSITIONS HARDEN ON ALL SIDES
The war’s impact on global oil markets has significantly increased the cost for the United States.
Some US officials and advisers to Trump urge a quick end to the war, warning that surging gasoline prices could exact a high political price from the president’s Republican Party, with US midterm elections looming.
Others are pressing Trump to maintain the offensive against the Islamic Republic to destroy its missile program and prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon, according to Reuters reporting.
Trump’s rejection of diplomatic efforts could indicate that, for now, the administration has no plans for a quick end to the war.
Indeed, both the United States and Iran appear even less willing to engage than during the opening days of the war, when senior US officials reached out to Oman to discuss de-escalating, according to several sources.
One source said Iran’s top security official, Ali Larijani, and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had also sought to use Oman as a conduit for ceasefire discussions that would have involved U.S. Vice President JD Vance.
But those discussions have not materialized.
Instead, Iran’s position has hardened, said a third senior Iranian source.
“Whatever was communicated previously through the diplomatic channels is irrelevant now,” said the source.
“The Guards strongly believe that if they lose control over the Strait of Hormuz, Iran will lose the war,” the source added, referring to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, an elite paramilitary force that controls large parts of the economy.
“Therefore, the Guards will not accept any ceasefire, ceasefire talks, or diplomatic efforts, and Iran’s political leaders will not engage in such talks despite attempts by several countries.”
