Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Jewish Canadian becomes first woman to win ultra-distance Race Across America

Leah Goldstein completed the race in 11 days, three hours and three minutes, beating her closest opponent by 17 hours.

Leah Goldstein. Source: Facebook.
Leah Goldstein. Source: Facebook.

A Jewish Canadian cyclist became the first woman to win the overall solo division of Race Across America (RAAM), the ultra-distance cycling competition, reported The Times of Israel.

Leah Goldstein, 52, crossed the RAAM finish line in Annapolis, Md., on June 26. As the “world’s toughest bicycle race,” according to its website, RAAM spans 3,000 miles and across 12 states between the Pacific and Atlantic coasts.

Goldstein completed the race in 11 days, three hours and three minutes—virtually nonstop—beating her closest opponent by 17 hours.

She survived days and nights of 95 degrees and up to 104 degrees Fahrenheit, extreme temperatures that caused all but three of her competitors to drop out of the race.

“I’ll probably do RAAM again and try to do it in 10 days. I think I have it in me,” she told The Times of Israel.

The Canadian-born daughter of Israeli parents won RAAM women’s solo division in 2011. In 2019, she came in second in the women’s division and fifth overall. For this year’s race, she competed in a qualifying 500-mile race and set a new women’s record, beating her own record by seven hours.

After reaching the finish line in Annapolis, Goldstein returned home to Vernon in British Columbia for some rest before she returns to racing later this year.

https://youtu.be/MaTIu41iCx0

“That’s not criticizing a lobby. That’s laundering antisemitism from your podium as mayor of a city with more than a million Jews,” stated Rep. Josh Gottheimer.
“I’m proud to see the dedication these students bring to the challenges facing our communities,” the Jewish congressman stated.
“My directive, together with that of the defense minister, to the IDF is clear and has not changed,” he stressed.
Qatar and Pakistan echo the vice president’s comments.
“We spend too much money on fighting antisemitism and not enough on strengthening our young people to stand up to antisemitism and to have a strong Jewish identity,” says Rabbi Raphael Shore.
JNS Summit confronts the global war on Jews and finding the tech to fight back.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.