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Oksana Baiul : ウィキペディア英語版
Oksana Baiul


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Oksana Baiul (born November 16, 1977) is a Ukrainian former figure skater. She is the 1993 World champion and the 1994 Olympic champion in ladies' singles.
Baiul is the first skater to win gold at the Winter Olympics representing Ukraine. She is also the first Olympic champion of independent Ukraine in any sport.
==Personal life==
Baiul was born in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union. Her parents divorced when she was two years old. Her father disappeared from her life, and she was raised by her mother, Marina—a French teacher—and her maternal grandparents. Her grandfather died in 1987, her grandmother in 1988, and in 1991 her mother, who had previously been very healthy, died suddenly as a result of ovarian cancer. Her father, Sergey, appeared at her mother's funeral but Oksana wanted nothing to do with him.
Baiul lived with the wife of her coach, Stanislav Koritek, who had moved to Canada, and then with friends. After moving to Odessa in mid-1992, she lived mainly in a dormitory with her expenses covered by the state. In 1993, she lived a month with Zmievskaya between the European and World Championships. After the 1994 Winter Olympics, Baiul moved to Simsbury, Connecticut, which is the location of the International Skating Center of Connecticut. In the late 1990s, she lived in Richmond, Virginia for several years before moving to Cliffside Park, New Jersey. After residing for 14 years in Cliffside Park, Baiul moved to Pennsylvania in March 2012, settling in Upper Makefield Township, Bucks County.
In January 1997, Baiul was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol after crashing her car into a tree in Bloomfield, Connecticut. The charges were dropped after she met the terms of probation and completed an alcohol education program. Her drinking continued, however, and in May 1997 she entered an alcohol rehabilitation program for two and a half months. In a 2004 interview, Baiul said she had been sober for six years, saying "This is more important than Olympic gold."
Baiul was raised as a Russian Orthodox Christian. As a child, she heard rumors that her grandmother was Jewish. In 2003, she phoned her old rink in Dnipropetrovsk to ask for assistance in locating her father—assuming it was a joke, they hung up twice but eventually Baiul managed to convince them of her identity and the rink manager helped her reunite with her father in September 2003. Her father confirmed that the rumor was true—her Romanian maternal grandmother was Jewish. Baiul considers herself Jewish due to matrilineality in Judaism. In 2005, Baiul said, "Being Jewish, that feels good. It feels natural, like a second skin". She is of Russian descent through her maternal grandfather. Her father died in 2006.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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