
Frum And Fit On Water, Land
If you regularly run laps around Brooklyn’s Prospect Park on Sunday mornings, or Thursday evenings, you might pass a pack of bearded men, with one striding confidently in front. This is Chaim Backman, the leader of the TriChai Triathlon Club, the first triathlon group geared specifically to Orthodox Jews.
Backman, a Lubavitcher who works as a physical therapist, is a longtime runner who has completed the New York City marathon, but never used to bike or swim, the other elements making up the grueling triathlon. He began triathlon training three years ago, and took a course to be a certified triathlon training coach and started up TriChai. Now he trains 40 Orthodox triathletes.
“These guys have mostly sat all these years and never did anything,” he says of some in his community feel good that I can help [make] a healthy change in people’s lives.”
Backman, a 43-year-old father of four, often sees the same runners in Prospect Park, and has a friendly relationship with many.
“I get a lot of ‘Shalom!’ comments,” he says.
Some of the women who train with him run in traditional clothing, while others don the shorts and T-shirts more typical of competitive runners.
Michelle Choina, a mother of three and one of TriChai’s members, started out running and bicycling in long skirts and long-sleeved shirts but says at a certain point she decided it wasn’t necessary anymore. Choina, who will turn 50 later this year, was biking up the West Side Highway when she encountered people completing the New York City Triathlon. After speaking to them, she decided to set her sights on completing a triathlon, something she’s done four times over the course of this year.
“Most people don’t do in a year what I accomplish in one day as a triathlete,” says Choina, whose youngest daughter now rides a road bike with her.
Next up Backman hopes to expand his training into schools, to help combat the obesity epidemic plaguing many young children today. But first, he’ll cheer on Choina and others from the club who will complete the NYC Triathlon on Sunday.
“People feel Jews aren’t that sportsy,” he says, but “[running-swimming-biking] challenges them to get out there and do things they’ve never done before.”




Yossi
It looks like chaim may be in a triathlon cult, I am going to
shove him into a cargo van and bring him to a safe house, and get him out of this cult, I think that I have done this once before.
TYE
hahahahahhaha, Chaim….hahahhahhahahhaha,,,, chaim,,,,,,chahcahhahahahhcacahhchahhca
HAAAAAAAAAA. GOT A GOOD LAUGH. ALL THE BEST….BE WELL…..
A FRIEND OF A FRIEND. :)))))
Great Job!
What a Kiddush Hashem!!
Park boy
Chaim you are the best
JT
How do I get in touch with Chaim Backman? I am also an Orthodox Jew that is training people in Los Angeles for triathlons.
runnerboy
Chaim can be reached via his website: http://www.trichai.com, or his office: 718-774-6144
One of his patients
Hi you (comment number 5),
If you want to get in touch with Chaim, his office phone number is 718-774-6144
dovid.ch
chaim was alway kinda slick
da women
your da man!
SB
Sweeeeeet article Chaim. Im riding upstate in two weeks on sunday. Have dinner ready!
P.O.
chaim nice shorts! :)
pants
why do you have to cut your pants. its beutiful what you are doing. great thing for the community but what about the pants. actually maybe its not an issue. anyways good work. promoting fitness promotes healthy bodies healthy bodies promote healthy neshamos and serving Hashem becomes more enjoyable and that brings MOshiach!!!!
Ushmartem Et Nafshosechem
Yashar Koach to Chaim for his good work and putting health and wellness out there – a great role model for all of us