Viktor Chukarin (born November 9, 1921, Krasnoarmeyskoye, Ukraine, U.S.S.R.—died August 25, 1984, Lviv, Ukraine) was the first of the great Soviet gymnasts, the winner of 11 Olympic medals, including 7 gold. At the 1952 Helsinki Games he was the most-decorated male athlete with six medals (four gold and two silver).
Viktor Chukarin was a prisoner of war who endured internment at 17 different concentration camps, including Buchenwald, during World War II.
In 1950 Chukarin graduated from the Institute of Physical Culture in Lvov (now Lviv), where in 1963 he became an assistant professor. At the 1952 Games in Helsinki—the first Olympics in which the U.S.S.R. competed—the 30-year-old Chukarin won gold medals as a member of the gymnastic team and for the horse vault, pommel horse, and the all-around. At the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, he again won gold medals with his team and for the parallel bars and the all-around. He also won silver medals for the rings and parallel bars in the 1952 Games and for the floor exercises in the 1956 Games. He was U.S.S.R. gymnastics champion (1949–51 and 1955) and won single events in 1948, 1952, 1954, and 1956. Chukarin also triumphed at the 1954 world championships, winning gold in the all-around and parallel bars.
1952 Helsinki GamesChukarin served as coach of the gymnastics team of Armenia from 1961 and of Ukraine from 1972. He later became head of gymnastics at the L’viv Institute of Physical Culture (now known as the Lviv State University of Physical Culture) in Ukraine. His book Put K Vershinam (“The Road to the Peaks”) was published in 1955. On the centennial anniversary of his birth in November 2021, Chukarin’s life and legacy were commemorated with a series of events held by the Olympic Academy of Ukraine. The champion gymnast was also the subject of a biographical film. A bronze statue of Chukarin stands as a monument at his grave in Lychakiv Cemetery in Lviv.