Flatbush, NY – Holy-War Between Orthodox Boxer vs Muslim

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    Brooklyn bruiser Dmitriy  Salita (right) wants a shot at the junior welterweight belt of Muslim champ Amir Khan (left).Flatbush, NY – Brawl that is holyJabbin’ Jew eyes title bout vs. Muslim

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    He’s a religious Jew from Brooklyn and the only thing unorthodox about him is a mean left jab.

    Now boxer Dmitriy “Star of David” Salita, 27, hopes to punch his way to the world junior-welterweight title against reigning champ Amir Khan — a Muslim.

    The symbolism will not be lost on fight fans when Salita steps into the ring to face Khan, 22, a Brit of Pakistani descent, in a bout likely to take place in December in London, according to World Boxing Association sources who say the combatants are in advanced negotiations.

    It’s the first time a Jew and a Muslim have fought for a title, said Brooklyn boxing-gym owner Tommy Gallagher.

    “Hollywood couldn’t have scripted this better,” television personality Rabbi Shmuley Boteach said with a chuckle. “But I hope not too much hype is made of it. It’s really cool that two people true to their faith rise to the top of their profession.”

    Salita, who lives in Flatbush, immigrated here from Ukraine when he was 9. He has since become a member of the Orthodox Jewish sect Chabad — but that hasn’t stopped him from going pro in 2001 and notching a 30-0 record.

    Local members of the Chabad community show up en masse at his matches.

    “You would think you were in a yeshiva,” Boteach said. “All these men in Coke-bottle glasses who are the most gentle people in the world are screaming ‘Hit him!’ as loud as they can.”

    Although Salita’s family was not observant, he found religion when he met a Chabad member in the hospital where his mother was dying of breast cancer.
    Salita doesn’t wear a yarmulke when he steps into the ring, but he does sport one in public. He refuses to fight on the Jewish Sabbath, which means no Friday night fights.

    He travels with a spiritual guide who cooks kosher food for him in their hotel room. On the Sabbath, he puts tape over the room-door latch to keep it from locking so he doesn’t have to use the electronic key card to get in.

    He sees no contradiction between his religion and his profession.
    “Judaism teaches you to use your talent for the positive,” he said. “A lot of people told me I’d never make it to the top because I don’t fight on Friday nights. But I did it, on my terms,” Salita said.

    Salita boasted that he’ll be the first Jewish pugilist going for the junior-welterweight title since the 1930s, when Barney Ross wore the crown.

    Khan was a teenage boxing sensation who took a silver medal for Great Britain at the 2004 Athens Olympics and became a world champ in July when he took the WBA belt from Andreas Kotelnik.

    He is a devout Muslim who studies the Koran, attends a mosque on Fridays when possible and prays in his corner before the bell. He wears Union Jack trunks when he enters the ring but dedicates his fights to Brits and Muslims.

    But Salita shrugged off the holy-war hype. “I have tremendous respect for Khan,” he said. “The only reason I am going to kick his butt is because he has my belt.”


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    32 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    so as my rov would say, “is this good for the jews?” the answer is NO!

    Hatzluchah Rabbah
    Hatzluchah Rabbah
    14 years ago

    This is the Rumble in the Brooklyn Boroooough !!! Keep it professional. No biting, no head butting. Say Tehillim !!! May Star of David Salita be matzliach. Netzach Yisrael !!!

    Harav Hagaon
    Harav Hagaon
    14 years ago

    I personally know Dovid Salita, and he is a real mentch, and an ehrlicher yid. He is very soft-spoken, and you’d never know he was a professional boxer. He actually just got married at 770 in Crown Heights, black hat and all, two weeks ago.

    joe
    joe
    14 years ago

    first of all mazal tov 2nd I hope u prove those people on youtube wrong and continue your undefeated record good luck

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Terrible. Don’t look to mess w them. I don’t think any good can come out of this

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Wonderful idea to let everyone know that he leaves his door open on shabbos, way to go dumb press.

    chacham levy
    chacham levy
    14 years ago

    Let’s pray that the sar she’ll yakov protects him over the sar she’ll eisav!

    Tina18
    Tina18
    14 years ago

    I got my money on Dimitry. When is the fight?

    Yossi
    Yossi
    14 years ago

    Am I crazy for thinking that hitting another person, or as it says, one that raises his hand on another is called a “Rushu”? How can you ba “religious and punch ppl for a proffesion???

    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    14 years ago

    Can someone explain how it is mutar to voluntary allow someone else to take punches at your head?

    Brian
    Brian
    14 years ago

    “He travels with a spiritual guide who cooks kosher food for him in their hotel room. On the Sabbath, he puts tape over the room-door latch to keep it from locking so he doesn’t have to use the electronic key card to get in.”

    Doesn’t that paragraph compromise his security. Sometimes journalists are just plain dumb and have zero discretion.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Mazal Tov for your wedding

    Mendy Hecht
    Mendy Hecht
    14 years ago

    This is a bad-for-the-Jews, lose-lose situation. If he loses, it’ll egg on all kinds of insults coming from Khan’s people. If he wins, it will (but hopefully won’t!) trigger reprisal attacks to “avenge” lost “honor.” Then again, maybe a Khan defeat will teach them to cool their jets for a while. Either way, I’m not as concerned as Jews seeing this as a Jew-vs.-Muslim thing as I am for Muslims seeing this as a Muslim-vs.-Jew thing.

    miamimiami
    miamimiami
    14 years ago

    kol hakavod dimitriy! we love you in miami!!!!! knock em out!

    dovid's friend
    dovid's friend
    14 years ago

    I met dimitry when he was an amateur boxer and still very “young” in his yiddishkeit. We davened at the same chabad house. I remember him buying aliyahs on Yom Tov for $770 — this was his tzedekah WHEN HE WAS AN AMATEUR.

    I moved away from NY and never heard about him for 8 years. It seems that he has grown tremendously in his Yiddishkeit. Mazal Tov on his chasuna — may he and his wife build a binyan adie ad that his makom torah for doros.

    May Hashem protect him.

    Please stop judging him negatively. This is a young man who grew up with no Torah at all. Look at him with a good eye — see how much he has grown. Does he have room to grow? Sure! WE ALL DO!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    yidden were targeted in lakewood, cuz they were easy. now we have hope…yay

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    i was once shabbos in las vegas, he played on friday, came into shul beaten up but happy he had won the fight before shabbos, kol hakovod to chabad

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    May he do this in shona reshoina?, isn’t this like going to war ?

    Pentakika
    Pentakika
    14 years ago

    Wow, people here are weighing in on this too much – is it good is it bad for Jewry. The fact is the 2 are professionals and anything other than (Jew vs Muslim relations) is a bunch of baloney.

    shimon taylor
    shimon taylor
    14 years ago

    Not very good!
    It is too close to violence, and, It looks too much like Jew vs. Muslim. Adding those together is even worse.
    Do you think that boxing cannot ever contain violence?
    Chess would better, in every way.

    Anon Ibid Opcit
    Anon Ibid Opcit
    14 years ago

    There have always been Jewish boxers. Wikipedia has pages on about fifty. The boxing sites list thousands. Two of the most famous are Max Baer and Daniel Mendoza.

    Baer was heavyweight champion of the world.

    Mendoza revolutionized the sport in the 19th century and is called “The Father of Scientific Boxing”. Not bad for a Sephardic kid in London.