...A promotional flier announced the evening’s subject as “Super Bowl to Super Jew.” There was truth in that advertising. Mr. Veingrad goes these days by his Hebrew name, Shlomo. He wore a black skullcap and the ritual fringes called tzitzit; he wore the Super Bowl ring he won in 1992 with the Dallas Cowboys and the Rolex watch that was a gift from Emmitt Smith, the team’s star running back.See the video in our post from last year on Veingrad.
Within his 6-foot-5 frame, Mr. Veingrad embodies two Jewish archetypes that do not often meet. He is the ba’al guf, the Jewish strongman, and the ba’al teshuva, the returnee to the faith. While two Jewish boxers on the scene now — Yuri Foreman and Dimitriy Salita — also are prominently observant, Mr. Veingrad may well be the only Orthodox athlete from the United States’ hugely popular team sports.
“I believe I played in the N.F.L. and have that ring so I can share my story with other Jews,” Mr. Veingrad, 46, said shortly before the U.S.C. event.
During it, he told a spellbound capacity audience, “The Torah is a playbook for how someone can live their life...” more
2/6/10
Times: How Alan Shlomo Veingrad went from the Super Bowl to Baal Teshuva
There's an inspiring and true story in the Times of how Alan Shlomo Veingrad went from the Super Bowl to Baal Teshuva.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment