Dr. Ian Froman
A tribute to the passing of tennis icon and Israel Prize recipient
When it comes to immigrants having enriched Israel, South Africans have been amongst the "top seeds" and when you add the contribution in the field of sport and tennis, few more so than Dr. Ian Froman, who passed away at the age of 87 on September 9, 2024.
It is no surprise that "Mr. Tennis" as he was affectionately known, was a recipient of Israel's most prestigious civilian award – the Israel Prize. Over the years I have had the privilege to interview Ian for a number of publications both in Israel and South Africa.
On hearing of his passing, I thought back to a sweltering hot summer's night in 2015, when a special gala event in his honor was held on the commercial rooftop of a high-rise in Herzliya Pituach.
From the stars in the night sky above to the stars below of Israeli tennis, there was Amos Mansdorf, Gilad Bloom, and Shlomo Glickstein, as well as video-clips and photos that included Ilie Năstase, Jimmy Connors, Brad Gilbert, and Tomas Muster, all taken with Ian over many years at his proud "offspring" – the Israel Tennis Center in Ramat Hasharon. From those around the world who were unable to attend, there were audio-visual messages giving Ian what they described as "a big hug."
I thought at the time of the Beatles number, "All you need is love" as there was a lot of it about. There was the love of Ian for tennis and the State of Israel and there was the reciprocal love of the Israel tennis world and the State of Israel for Ian.
Ian's journey, more like an adventure, began with love.
OPEN COURT'SHIP
Representing South Africa in tennis at the 1963 Maccabi Games, having competed and getting to the 3rd round in the men's singles at Wimbledon in 1955 going down to eventual finalist Kurt Nielsen, this young graduate in dentistry "fell in love with Israel" and "I made the decision to makeAliyah." Only snag was when he returned to Johannesburg after the Maccabi Games, he also fell in love with a young girl named Ruth. After courting Ruth for a few weeks, he was now faced with a dilemma – it's either Ruth or Israel. "I doubted Ruth would ever come live in Israel and so I stopped asking her out. What was the point …. why pursue that which you know has no long-term future." Still, Ian could not shake Ruth from his mind and so called her again to ask her out, but this time it was she who turned him down. Explains Ruth:
"I wanted to live in Israel and thought why pursue a romance with a dentist who obviously wanted to stay and practice in Joburg!"
This bizarre situation of each not knowing what the other was truly thinking was only later resolved when Ian accepted a chance invitation to a function at Ruth's parent's home and an intimate chat over cocktails, revealed they loved Israel as much as each other, so much so that later that same evening, they announced their engagement. Shortly thereafter, the newlyweds – or in tennis parlance, 'Doubles Partners' – moved to Israel and so began their journey into the history books. Ian never went on to practice dentistry and instead proceeded to change the face of tennis in Israel.
It did not happen overnight!
INSPIRATIONAL IAN
After arriving in Israel in 1964, "I thought I would slot into the local game, only to discover that tennis in those days was something out of the Jurassic age. I used to run around like a madman just to find a court to train. There were no facilities and we often used to furtively sneak onto private courts to practice. Apart from private courts, it seemed to me that the only privileged people playing tennis were tourists at beach hotels." This motivated Ian, who together with Freddie Krivine, Joseph Shane, Harold Landesberg, Rubin Josephs, and Dr. William Lippy began fundraising to launch tennis as a sport in Israel by building a national Israel Tennis Center (ITC). This was achieved on an old strawberry patch in Ramat HaSharon donated to the ITC by the government, and on April 25, 1976, the late Leah Rabin, wife of the late Prime Minister of Israel, Yitzhak Rabin, cut the ribbon to the Center, and 250 children signed up to participate. Another who in a sense also "signed up" was the Prime Minister, who for the rest of his life played frequently for well-deserved relaxation.
The Israel Tennis Centers, under Froman's inspirational direction and fundraising finesse, grew over the years from strength to strength, as tennis centers opened up from Kiryat Shmona in the North to Beer Sheba in the South. It was little wonder that this chapter in the history of tennis in Israel is referred to as the "Froman Revolution". In 1989, Froman received the Israel Prize, the country's most prestigious civilian award.
This recognition was bestowed not so much for the Center's contribution towards striving for excellence in the sport, but more for providing community enrichment programs and popularizing the sport across the socio-economic divide. The centers from their inception, catered to children and families from all religions and ethnic groups – without prejudice.
"Tennis should not be an elitist game and we set out from the beginning to make it accessible to kids from outlying areas," asserted Ian. "We included children from all backgrounds and religion, providing them with a lifetime sport in an educational environment." The ITC proved an enriching sporting mechanism where Jews and Arabs could meet and play from a young age and foster better understanding.
Recognizing the immense contribution beyond sport, State President Chaim Hertzog, said in presenting the Israel Prize to Ian:
"You have created a virtual social revolution throughout Israel."
Inspirational
What the State President meant by a "social revolution" was best explained by the late Kollie Friedstein, another South African roped in by Froman, who would go on to serve as Executive Director of the ITC as well as Chairman of the Israel Tennis Association. Friedstein, who immigrated to Israel in 1942 from Johannesburg imbued by the ideology of his Zionist youth movement – HaShomer HaTzair and was one of the founders of Kibbutz Shoval in the Negev, disclosed to me in an interview that he was drawn to Froman's concept, "not so much to produce future tennis champions, but of creating healthy environments across the country attracting kids who might otherwise be on the streets. I saw this as an expression of my Zionism."
Of course, the advantages of sport centers were not always immediately apparent to everyone at the time. During the opening ceremony of the Jaffa Tennis Center, Shlomo Lahat, the then mayor of Tel Aviv-Yafo, was pelted with rotten tomatoes by local protestors. Established in an area known at the time for its crime, prostitution and drugs, residents had complained that they needed an upgrade in educational and cultural facilities, not tennis courts. Soon enough though, the Tennis Center became the pride of the town, and people were advertising their homes for sale as being "within walking distance of the Tennis Center." Froman knew where he was heading with his vision.
Apart from being one of the largest social service organizations for children in Israel and the largest tennis program for children in the world, the ITC over the years produced outstanding players who made their mark on the most prestigious courts around the world.
While its graduates have included greats like Shlomo Glickstein, Amos Mansdorf, and Dudi Sela, all top 30 ranked players, it was the double players of Andy Ram and Yoni Erlich who made history for Israel by winning Grand Slam titles. In 2006, Ram became the first Israeli tennis player to win a Grand Slam title when he captured the mixed doubles title at Wimbledon with his Russian partner, Vera Zvonareva. Then in 2008, with Erlich, the "Dynamo Duo" became the first Israeli doubles tennis team to win a Grand Slam tennis title in winning the Australian Open in Melbourne.
Former Israeli professional tennis player Gilad Bloom who reached a career-high world ranking of 61, posted on social media on hearing of Froman's passing:
"At age 11, as a promising young player in Israel, Ian introduced me to Dick Savitt, a Jewish Wimbledon and Australian Open champion. Within a year, I became a world champion for my age group. Alongside my parents, Ian was one of the most important people in my life and influenced its course more than anyone else."
Referring to the experiences he and other top players of his generation and those that came before and those that followed, Bloom says, "The confidence of Israel tennis players to compete at the highest level, would never have been possible without Ian Froman." Rattling off the names of Israel's tennis greats like Amos Mansdorf "the best player of my era," Shahar Pe'er and Dudi Sela who all literally "grew up in the tennis centers Ian established," he took a sport "that didn't exist in Israel and brought it to the point where we had top-20 players and reached the Davis Cup semifinals."
And it was at the Davis Cup tournaments hosted in Israel that brought Israelis in their multitudes to the stadium in Ramat Hasharon. There was always a festive atmosphere with that head of white hair bobbing up all over the place as Ian was at home holding "court."
CUP RUNNETH OVER
Covering the Davis Cup tournaments as a reporter, I recall, when Israel was up against countries like the UK, Chile, Austria, or South Africa, one could be excused for thinking it was more like war than tennis – a far cry from the sedate ambience of a Wimbledon or Roland Garros. With drums beating and blearing horns, the crowd traditionally erupted with every point won and then descending into the depths of despair with every point lost. Usually there were selected tunes for either – "David Melech Yisrael" for points won, with the player's name substituted for "David" and the Funeral March" for points lost. Always placing the weight of the nation on the shoulders of their Israeli competitors, the spectators forgot they were spectators and close calls were far too important a matter to be left to the likes of umpires, who battled to maintain decorum – generally an unknown phenomenon in Israel.
Such was the vibrant atmosphere at Ian's creation.
TIME FOR TENNIS "In life, everything is timing," said Ian at an event honoring him in 2022. "When hitting the ball in tennis, you need to time it correctly. If you get married or go into business, timing is essential. For me, the timing was just right. It started just after the Yom Kippur War. Israel was pretty depressed. With the Russians and Ethiopians who came in afterwards, how would we help them integrate?" These words resonated with this writer as I recall following the mass Russian immigration to Israel in the 1990s, the Tennis Center in Ramat Hasharon together with the South African immigrant organization, TELFED, sponsored a project organizing tennis lessons for Russian adults that were bussed to the Center and received tennis instruction in Hebrew as well as Israeli folk dancing on an adjacent court. It was a project that gelled exactly with Ian's philosophy of using the ITC as an instrument of integration into Israeli society. As he said, "The centers have been a way of bringing children together in Israel, which is a melting pot of people from all over the world, from different societies, different religions, different backgrounds, and different finances."
FINAL SET
Listening to the fine tributes at Ian's funeral at Kfar Vitkin from members of the family, friends and people from the world of Israeli tennis, I thought back to that event honoring Ian in 2015 when he said what I thought captured his journey best of all:
"I do not have to think back on life as a cup half empty or half full, for mine runneth over."
Our condolences to wife Ruth, children Yarona, Amira, Philip, and their families.
David E. Kaplan is the Editor and Cofounder of Lay of the Land where the article first appeared
www.layoftheland.online
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