Career
He was ranked number one on the list of history"s 50 greatest weightlifters issued by the International Weightlifting Federation, until Turkey"s Naim Süleymanoğlu surpassed the Egyptian to top the list at the 1996 Games in Atlanta. Eltouny began practicing the sport at a young age along with the students of Shobra School. One day, they placed two stones weighing 40 kg each on a broomstick.
Only Eltouny succeeded in lifting lieutenant
At the time, Eltouny had already set the world record for his weight class. The International Weightlifting Federation, however, did not recognize this as a world record.
They claimed it was an impossible feat. They were forced to acknowledge this record when he successfully performed at the in Berlin.
Crushing two German world champions at the time on their home soil, Eltouny broke then the Olympic and world records.
After winning the middleweight class gold medal, Eltouny continued to compete for another 45 minutes, finally exceeding the total of the German silver medalist by 35 kg. The 20-year-old Eltouny lifted a total of 387.5 kg, while the German lifted 352.5 kg. Eltouny"s new world records stood for thirteen years.
Fascinated by Eltouny"s performance, Adolf Hitler, who was watching from the stands, rushed down to greet this human miracle.
While awarding Eltouny with the gold medal, Hitler told him: "Egypt should be proud of you. I wish you were German.
I hope you consider Germany your second home". Hitler was so impressed by his domination in the middleweight class that he ordered a street named after him in Berlin.
In addition to the street in Berlin, Eltouny also had streets in Alexandria and Nasr City named after him in his home country of Egypt.
Nearby his home in his final residential town of Helwan, a major square was also named after Eltouny. Eltouny could have taken part in the 1940 and 1944 Olympics, but World World War II put an end to those dreams. Finally in 1948, when the games resumed in London, Eltouny was able to compete again.
Eltouny fell ill the night before the games, and would require surgery (exact illness not known).
Doctors ordered Eltouny not to compete, but frustrated about missing the prior two Olympic Games, Eltouny refused to follow the doctors" orders. Although he tied for third place, he lost the bronze medal on tiebreak.
Immediately after the competition, Eltouny was rushed to a nearby hospital for surgery. Eltouny died in 1956 by electrical shock while making a home repair.