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Tarnished gold

‘They’re all gone’

 
 
 
Scholars seek to keep alive memory of Olympic terror

Forty years ago, Palestinian “Black September” terrorists murdered 11 Israeli team members during the Olympic Games in Munich. Although the International Olympic Committee (IOC) declined Israel’s request for a moment of silence at this summer’s London games, there are scholars working to ensure that the 1972 tragedy is not forgotten.

One such expert is David Clay Large, a professor of history at Montana State University and author of the book Munich 1972: Tragedy, Terror, and Triumph at the Olympic Games.

In May, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon wrote to the IOC on behalf of the widows of two 1972 victims, who called for a moment of silence as a memorial during the upcoming Olympics. IOC President Jacques Rogge responded that a moment of silence would not be held because the IOC “has officially paid tribute to the memory of the athletes on several occasions.”

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David Clay Large, left, and Danny Ayalon

The same month, Large gave a presentation on the 1972 Munich Olympics at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York. In an interview, Large said that a request for a moment of silence “has been made before a number of times by various groups, and the IOC has always declined.

“The reasons they give are that the Olympics are above politics, that they should be just about international competition and not drag into this atmosphere the political, social controversies of the day,” he said. “That is the argument they give, but the Games have always been political, right from the beginning, and none more so than Munich 1972. The IOC should acknowledge reality and acknowledge this event that took place 40 years ago, which was the greatest tragedy to befall the Olympic Games. I think it is hypocrisy on the part of the IOC.”

Set against the backdrop of the turbulent late 1960s and early ‘70s, Large’s book provides a comprehensive history of the 1972 games, the abduction, and the hostages’ tragic deaths after a botched rescue mission by German police. Drawing on a wealth of newly available sources, Large interweaves the political drama surrounding the games with the athletic spectacle in the arena of play.

According to Gabriel Sanders, director of public programs at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, Large’s presentation was appropriate for several reasons.

“The story of the Munich Olympics is in many ways about Germany’s overcoming its Nazi past, and it is also a story about the Arab-Israeli conflict and the birth of Palestinian national consciousness,” Sanders said. “What the book does is situates the murder of the 11 athletes not only in those contexts but within the context of the Cold War and how the Cold War affected and was affected by Olympic politics.”

Sanders said the Munich Olympics grew in part out of an effort to have an Olympic Games in East and West Berlin at the same time. “The Olympics had this vision of themselves as being a bridge and something that superceded politics.”

Large was in Munich in 1972 while researching his previous book, Nazi Games: The Olympics of 1936. He did not attend the Olympics but said the tragedy affected him personally.

Security plays a major role in Large’s new book. He said that security has improved significantly at the Olympics since 1972, mainly because enormous amounts of money and effort have been spent on the games. “Along with construction, security has become the preeminent budget item,” he said. “Huge efforts go in to try to protect the games. For the most part those efforts have been successful. There was the bombing in Atlanta in 1996 that resulted in some fatalities, but nothing on the scale of Munich since 1972. We know that for London, they are spending a billion dollars on security alone.”

The conventional wisdom surrounding the Munich tragedy is that the Germans were woefully unprepared. This is only partially true, according to Sanders.

“Germany did change and they wanted to project this demilitarized image of themselves,” Sanders said. “They didn’t want to have armed guards. At the same time, they were prepared. It was a tumultuous moment in world history. The Vietnam War was raging and politics had intruded on the 1968 Olympics with the famous black power salute. What the West Germans seemed more worried about was black militants and not Middle Eastern ones. They were prepared, but for the wrong kind of threat.”

Large said the Black September commandos in Munich “wanted to take the Israelis hostages so they could exchange them for Arab prisoners.” They were “willing to kill and ended up doing so, but that resulted from their plan running amok,” he said.

“There was poor preparation on both sides,” he continued. “The leaders did not tell the foot soldiers until the last minute what was going on. There was no coherent plan to take the hostages.”

Shortly after the crisis began, the Palestinians demanded the release of 234 prisoners held in Israeli jails. By the end of the ordeal, the kidnappers had killed 11 Israeli athletes and coaches and a West German police officer. Five of the eight members of Black September were killed by police officers during a failed rescue attempt. In “Operation Wrath of God,” Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir ordered the Mossad to assassinate the three surviving members — who were captured but later released by West Germany after Black September hijacked a Lufthansa plane — and others involved in the Munich massacre. The Mossad assassinated leading Black September figure Ali Hassan Salameh in 1979.

The Bavarian police botched the rescue attempt in 1972 because they were not prepared, Large said. “They had no training or counterterrorism force, and they didn’t work well together or share information properly.” Conditions have changed since then. “We have those things now, and London has them.”

One of the issues still debated is whether Israel offered to help the Bavarian police.

“The Israelis say they offered to send their [counterterrorism] force right away and the Bavarians said ‘No we can’t have that,’” Large said. “I think the Israeli claim is true and the Bavarians declined it because it would have been embarrassing for them to have to turn matters over to the Israelis. The Bavarians didn’t have a counterterrorism force at that time, and the Israelis had the best force in the world.”

Large said that although the Olympics are billed as a way to bring countries together to compete in a peaceful way, they remain what they always have been — political.

“Events like the Munich tragedy call into question the advisability of enterprises like the Olympics at times of international tension,” he said. “I’m not sure it makes much sense given what’s going on to put on these big shows. I’m not saying they should be discontinued, but it’s worth having the conversation.”

JointNews Media Service

 

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As support mounts, Olympic committee still says no

International support is growing for a moment of silence at the opening ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games to honor the memories of the 11 Israeli athletes who were murdered by Palestinian terrorists on the final day of the games 40 years ago. The committee that runs the quadrennial event, however, continues to turn a deaf ear to the pleas. The Olympics begin in London on July 27.

Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), said several times in the last few months that such a tribute has no place at the games themselves. Nonetheless, “within the Olympic family, the memory of the victims of the terrible massacre in Munich in 1972 will never fade away,” he wrote in a letter on May 1 rejecting the request.

 
 

Munich 11 widow Ankie Spitzer keeps up her fight for a minute of Olympic time

WEST NYACK, N.Y. – The room was splashed in blood, the walls riddled with bullet holes. Ankie Spitzer stood amid the chaos and made a vow.

“If this is the place where Andrei spent the last hours of his life, he and his friends, I am not going to shut up. I will tell this story,” said Spitzer, whose late husband, Andrei, was the fencing coach for the 1972 Israeli Olympic delegation.

And for the past 40 years, as each Olympics approaches, she has kept her promise to remember the Israeli delegation members who were held hostage and murdered by eight members of the Palestinian terrorist group Black September during the XX Olympiad in Munich.

 
 

Remembering Munich, looking toward London

London’s Jews prepare for Olympics with Munich 11 on their minds

LONDON – For the British Jewish community, the most memorable moment of the London Olympics may be a somber one.

On Aug. 6, several hundred people are expected to attend a commemoration for the 11 Israeli athletes and coaches murdered by Palestinian terrorists during the 1972 Munich Olympics.

“From conversations across the community, the key thing people are engaged in around the Olympics is that they want to see a commemoration of Munich,” Peter Mason, director of the London Jewish Forum, said.

 
 
 
 

Fierce grace

Local head of Rabbis Without Borders makes it onto 36 most inspirational list

Black fire on white fire.

That’s the Torah. Whether you believe it to be dictated to Moshe by God at Sinai, put together later by divinely inspired scribes, or completely human-made, a product of its time and place, you know it to be unchanging, open perhaps to interpretation, but certainly not to editing or revision.

That’s the Torah with a capital T.

Then there is the torah, with a lower-case t. That’s the perhaps divinely inspired wisdom, refracted through a purely and therefore unique lens, that lies often dormant within each of us.

 

Up court and personal

Camp Ramah created lasting ties; tragedy tightened them

Two realities intersected at a basketball game in Manhattan’s Chelsea Piers on Sunday, creating its own third reality.

Reality 1 — Camp Ramah in the Berkshires, the Conservative movement’s local summer camp, creates a feeling of intense loyalty to each other, as well as to Jewish life, in many of its alumni. Those bonds connect various former campers in different ways. One of those ways is basketball. Some Ramah alums meet in far western Manhattan every Sunday from October through April to play basketball through the Ramah Basketball Association.

Reality 2 — Eric Steinthal, who grew up in Haworth, where his parents, Marilyn and Bruce, still live, died suddenly of a brain aneurysm on March 17, 2012. He was a Ramah alum and a former RBA commissioner. He was 31 years old when he died.

 

Bottling the Shoah

Leonia psychologist-artist reveals truths in glass-

Bottle.

It’s a simple word, isn’t it? As everyone knows, it is mainly a noun — a container, generally with a long neck, usually used to hold liquids.

It’s also a verb — “to bottle” is to place something inside one of those containers.

It takes no particular act of imagination to use the word, or the object it represents. It does take imagination to see it as a symbol, a kind of blank slate, representing something else.

 

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The mission is the message

Norpac’s journey to D.C. makes a difference, organizers say

Politics is all about relationships.

When you think about it, what isn’t?

We would all like to believe that if you can lay out facts, make a case, and show that there is both moral and strategic good on your side, you will win. But in order to do that, you have to have someone in front of whom to lay out the facts. You need someone who will listen when you make your case.

That is as true about winning support for Israel as any other issue.

So if you are passionate about Israel, know your stuff, and want to make a difference, all you have to do is talk to your friend the politician. Master your facts, shape your argument, make it — the way to influence legislators, and therefore to affect legislation.

 

Going for gold

There are some things that most of us never have and never will experience. We can imagine what it would feel like, but we never will really know.

One of those things has to be entering a huge arena and jumping, dancing, twirling, flying, seemingly beyond gravity’s pull. For about a minute and a half. To music. In front of thousands of people, clapping for you, and tens of millions more sitting in their living rooms all across the world watching you. Judging you. At the Olympics.

You’re very young when you do this — just 18. It’s the Summer Games in London last summer. You do very well in all your competitions — and you get the gold in your last one, the floor program. You are the first American woman to do this. You also win a bronze medal for your work on the balance beam. You are also the team captain, and the whole team wins the overall gold, as well.

 

Going for gold

It’s ‘Aly Oop’ for Eden

There are a lot of differences between Carnegie Hall and an Olympic stadium, but when you ask your GPS how to get to either one, you get the same directions.

Practice.

It helps if you start that practice when you are really young. In other words, if you want even a chance to become Aly Raisman, first you have to work very hard to turn yourself into Eden Glick.

 
 
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