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Japanese Olympic Gymnast Does Her Routine to Classic Hasidic Song

Sae Miyakawa performed at Rio to the tune of Rabbi Nahman of Breslov’s “Kol ha-Olam Kulo”

by
Jesse Bernstein
August 11, 2016
Quinn Rooney/Getty Images
Sae Miyakawa of Japan competes on the vault during the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Team Final on Day 4 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Rio Olympic Arena on August 9, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Quinn Rooney/Getty Images
Quinn Rooney/Getty Images
Sae Miyakawa of Japan competes on the vault during the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Team Final on Day 4 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Rio Olympic Arena on August 9, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

If you don’t know by now that Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman used to play “Hava Negilah” during her floor routine, you’re a little behind. A slightly deeper dive would turn up Sasha Cohen, 2006 Olympic silver medalist in figure skating, who choreographed her routine to Barbara Streisand’s “Don’t Rain on My Parade.” That American Jewish women would use such music in competition isn’t really surprising, but Tuesday, another competitor threw her hat in the ring, this one a bit more out of the ordinary.

Sae Miyakawa, a 16-year-old Japanese gymnast, took the floor Tuesday night to the chorus of “Kol ha-Olam Kulo,” an 18th century aphorism and song of Rabbi Nahman of Breslov, set to klezmer music. Check it out:

UPDATE: The video of the routine has been taken down, but you can watch Miyakawa perform it in Japan below:

Why did Miyakawa choose this music? Perhaps it was a coincidence; the melody could have originated outside Judaism and then been appropriated by Rabbi Nahman for his lyrics. Or perhaps Miyakawa felt that the words of the rabbi’s song were particularly suited to the occasion of Olympic gymnastics: “The whole world is a very narrow bridge, and the main thing is to remember not to be afraid.”

Jesse Bernstein is a former Intern at Tablet.