Athletes saddened by the postponement of the 2025 Maccabiah Games in Israel, but they agree with the reasons for the decision.
Elle and Sasha Hartje are sisters. Harry Glanz and Sydney Bierwirth are father and daughter.
Each was supposed to compete for the U.S. next month in the 22nd Maccabiah Games in Israel.
But the aptly named Jewish Olympics, held every four years, were postponed until the summer of 2026 last week by the Maccabi World Union because of security concerns and emergency measures created by Israel’s Operation Rising Lion’s offensive against Iran.
The Maccabiah Games were scheduled for July 8-22. More than 8,000 athletes from 55 countries were expected to compete in 45 sports across the country.
Detroit Country Day School grads Elle Hartje, 24, and Sasha Hartje, 26, of Bloomfield Hills and Bierwirth, 30, a Walled Lake Central High School grad and former West Bloomfield resident, are members of the U.S. women’s open ice hockey team.
Each was a Jewish News High School Athlete of the Year: Bierwirth (then Glanz) in 2012, Sasha Hartje in 2017 and Elle Hartje in 2019.
Harry Glanz, 67, of West Bloomfield, is a member of the U.S. men’s grand masters (age 65 and older) golf team.
All four athletes plan to compete in Israel next summer.
“It was 100% the right decision to postpone the Maccabiah Games, but I’m still a little bummed because this would have been the first trip to Israel for Elle and myself,” said Sasha Hartje. “I’m not frustrated or mad, just a little bummed.”
Elle Hartje said the trip was marked on her calendar for more than a year.
“We just got our hockey gear in the mail and our flight to Israel was leaving June 28,” she said. “It’s disappointing that we’re not going, but you can’t do anything about things you don’t control.”
The sisters were approached by U.S. women’s open ice hockey coach Justin Levin to be on the team at the 2022 Maccabiah Games — which were supposed to be held in 2021, but postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic — but were unable to work it into their schedules.
The last time they were teammates was when they were in high school (Elle was a sophomore and Sasha was a senior at Country Day). They were on the Little Caesars U19 girls travel hockey team.
Harry Glanz and his daughter each made the Team USA roster for the 2025 Maccabiah Games through tryouts held last year and have been looking forward to this summer’s Games since then.
“We thought it would be cool for a father and daughter to walk out together at the opening ceremony with our USA garb on,” Glanz said. “It would have been a cool moment to share with each other.”
Bierwirth, who lives in Colorado Springs, Colo., said she also was excited about walking with her dad at the opening ceremony, “and when it happens next year, it will be that much more special.
“It was the right decision to postpone the Maccabiah Games. They’re supposed to be a celebration for Jewish people and the sports they love.”
She should know about the celebration. She’s experienced it.
Bierwirth, who played Division I club hockey for Michigan State University from 2012-16, was a member of the U.S. women’s open ice hockey team at the 2022 Maccabiah Games that won a silver medal. Canada beat the U.S. in the championship game.
She’s an attorney. After graduating from Michigan State, she earned a law degree at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law.
Her father is a co-founder of Bingham Farms-based Capital Mortgage Funding and a member of the board of directors of the Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation.
Elle Hartje recently completed her first season with the New York Sirens of the Professional Women’s Hockey League after a record-breaking career at Yale University.
Sasha Hartje was a Division I college athlete in two sports. She played four years of tennis at Emory University and one year of hockey at Long Island University.
Because of that experience, she doesn’t think the one-year postponement of the Maccabiah Games will diminish her hockey skills.
“I took four years off from hockey, came back, and was able to compete at a high level against the best college hockey players in the country,” she said. “As the Maccabiah Games get closer next year, I’ll train my butt off.”
Unlike her sister, hockey is not Sasha’s occupation. She’s the manager of the account management team at Fire Rover, a Farmington Hills company that offers remote fire detection and suppression technology.
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