Angarag Sandag is first Maccabiah athlete from Mongolia

The tennis player learned only last year that he has Jewish roots on his grandmother’s side.

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Regardless of what he accomplishes on the tennis court, Angarag Sandag already has made history: He is the first athlete from Mongolia to compete in the Maccabiah Games.

The 20-year-old native of the country’s capital, Ulan Bator, Sandag learned just a year ago that he has Jewish roots. His paternal grandmother told him that her grandmother, Ida, a native of Latvia who later moved to Russia and then Mongolia, was Jewish.

Sandag said he owns no Jewish items and knows little about the religion or culture, but hopes Israel enlightens him.

“I’m really new to this. This tournament gives me a much bigger opportunity to learn about [Judaism],” said Sandag, who alone constitutes the Mongolian delegation to the Maccabiah.

It’s been a busy summer for Sandag, an environmental engineering student at Mongolia International University. He flew to Israel from Kazan, Russia, where he competed in the Universiade, an international sporting event for university athletes.

The Maccabiah’s tennis competition aside, Sandag said he’s most excited about meeting Jews from around the world.

“My first words to learn are how to greet each other [in Hebrew],” Sandag said in an interview just before departing Russia for Israel. “I’m not looking forward [most] to playing in the tournament but to talking to the players.”

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