Background
Leibovitch, who is Jewish, was born in Hod HaSharon in Israel.
Leibovitch, who is Jewish, was born in Hod HaSharon in Israel.
She studied philosophy at Tel Aviv University.
She first swam at the age of two. Her back was badly injured and she was disabled at the age of 18, in 1992, from an accident during her service in the Israeli Defense Forces, while training to be an officer Leibovitch is paralyzed from the waist down.
After two major operations, she still had permanent back and leg injuries.
She began swimming as part of her rehabilitation. Leibovitch has competed in the Paralympic Games, a major international multi-sport event in which athletes who have a physical disability compete, which were created by Ludwig Guttmann, a German Jewish doctor who escaped from the Nazis.
She broke three world records along the way. Asked whom she views as her hero, she responded:
I admire people who live at peace with themselves.. who are not afraid of what society might say.. who think to make themselves really happy.
She was given the honor of lighting the torch at the 2001 Maccabiah Games at Teddy Stadium in Jerusalem.
She set a world record in 2002 in the 100-meter women's freestyle, with a time of 1:08.90. She set a world record for handicapped swimmers in the 200-meter backstroke of 258.55 in June 2004 at the Wingate Institute. By 2004, she was also the world record holder in the 100-meter freestyle.
The world record holder in the event, she finished in 1:19.55, nearly five seconds faster than second place Dóra Pásztory of Hungary.
The Games hosted competing athletes from 136 countries. In 2005, she was voted the 46th-greatest Israeli of all time, in a poll by the Israeli news website Ynet to determine whom the general public considered the 200 Greatest Israelis.
Leibovitch is a three-time world champion, a five-time European champion, a holder of three world records (for the 100-meter and 200-meter backstroke and the 100-meter freestyle), and an eight-time Paralympic medal winner. She won three gold medals at the European Championships in Germany in 1999. Leibovitch won three gold medals in swimming at the 2000 Paralympic Games in Sydney, Australia, winning the 100-meter backstroke, 100-meter freestyle, and 50-meter freestyle events. I look up to people who achieve what they set their minds to If people can relate to a disabled person as a winner, then the whole attitude towards disabled persons might change. And if I achieve that, that"s my fourth medal. She won three gold medals in the Israeli Swimming Championships for the Handicapped in 2003, and, set a world record for the 50-meter backstroke (3778 seconds), also earning gold medals in the 50-meter and 100-meter freestyle events. In September 2004 she won a gold medal in the women"s 100-meter backstroke (1:1955) at the 2004 Paralympic Games in Athens. She also won two silver medals (swimming a 10986 in the 100-meter freestyle, 19 seconds behind Paralympic-record-setting American Jessica Long, who broke her own Paralympic record, and the 50-meter freestyle) and a bronze medal (in the 200-meter individual medley). She is a three-time world champion, a five-time European champion, a holder of three world records (for the 100-meter and 200-meter backstroke and the 100-meter freestyle), and an eight-time Paralympic medal winner.