Naomi Kutin


Naomi Chaya Kutin is an American powerlifter who has set numerous records in the sport at several weight classes since starting her career at the age of 8. Her accomplishments as a Modern Orthodox Jewish woman in a field predominantly populated by men was the subject of the 2016 documentary Supergirl.

Early life

Raised in Fair Lawn, New Jersey, Kutin is the daughter of Ed Kutin, a fellow powerlifter of Ashkenazi Jewish background, and Neshama Kutin, a Colorado native of English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and German background. Kutin's mother, who was raised Pentecostal Christian before converting to Judaism in adulthood, wanted her daughter to participate in activities like powerlifting that would make her an empowered woman.
Kutin attended Yeshivat Noam in Paramus, New Jersey and was a member of the class of 2019 at Ma'ayanot Yeshiva High School in Teaneck. She speaks English and Hebrew. She is now on a gap year program in Israel by the name of Machon Maayan spending a year focused on personal growth before attending Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ.

Powerlifting

Kutin began powerlifting at the age of 8 while attending Yeshivat Noam. At the age of 9 and weighing, Kutin broke the world record for the weight class when she squatted.
A documentary film about her, titled Supergirl, premiered in 2016 at the Hamptons International Film Festival. Director Jessie Auritt was drawn to her story after reading about her accomplishments as an Orthodox Jewish woman in a male-dominated sport. The documentary depicts Kutin's training regimen, religious life, chronic migraines, and learning to deal with high expectations. In December 2017, it made its U.S. television debut as part of the long-running PBS documentary series Independent Lens.
As of December 2017, she has "current personal bests of a 321 lbs Squat, 127 lbs bench and 363 lbs deadlift," per Auritt.