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Sport | Judo |
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Abbreviation | NJF |
Founded | 1967 |
Affiliation | IJF |
Regional affiliation | EJU |
Headquarters | Oslo |
President | BREKKE Arnstein[1] |
Official website | |
www | |
The Norwegian Judo Federation (Norwegian: Norges Judoforbund - NJF) is the national federation of judo in Norway. It is a member of both the European Judo Union[2] and the International Judo Federation (IJF).[1] The Judokas have been actively participating in international tournaments.
The Norwegian Judo Federation was founded in 1967.[citation needed]
Three Norwegian Judokas participated at the 1984 Summer Olympics. Alfredo Chinchilla participated in the Men's 65 kg category. He won one fight. Frank Evensen and Fridtjof Thoen lost their first round.
One Norwegian Judoka participated at the 1992 Summer Olympics. Stig Traavik lost the first round.
In 2002 the Norwegian Judo Federation started training Afghan judokas under an exchange program with the Afghan Judo Federation established that year with the federation slogan "Judo for Peace". What began as a modest effort took on a big scale as increasingly more Afghan children and teenagers enrolled in the training program, the demand rising further. The project's objective also included giving priority to the underprivileged girls and women of Afghanistan, who showed equal interest and enthusiasm to their male counterparts. The result was a historic first: Fariba Rezayee became the first ever Afghan female to participate in an Olympic competition (in 2004).[3]
In 2010, it participated in the "Judo for Peace Event" hosted by the IJF in Jaipur, India.[4]
The organisation's headquarters is in Oslo.
Dates | Name |
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1967–1969 | Torkel Sauer |
1970 | Jon Døhl |
1971–1972 | Atle Lundsrud |
1972-1973 | Gunnar Foss |
1974 | Per Ingvoldstad |
1975–1976 | Odd Johnsen |
1977–1979 | Rune Neraal |
1980–1983 | Jan Frank Ulvås |
1984–1986 | Lars Nicolay Hvardal |
1987–1991 | Bjarne Heimdal |
1991–1994 | Arild Sand |
1994–1999 | Erik Otto Jacobsen |
1999–2003 | Alf Birger Rostad |
2003–2009 | Jan Eirik Schiøtz |
2009–2014 | Vibeke Thiblin |