Forty years after the killing of eleven members of the Israeli Olympic team in Munich, the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) rejected international requests to commemorate the murdered athletes with a
single minute of silence at the beginning of the London games.
Not one single
minute. So what are the Olympics all about anyway? They no
longer celebrate amateurism in sports – that façade was buried completely with
Michael Jordan and the 1992 USA basketball “Dream Team.” Thankfully. Communist countries
had been dancing around the amateur/professional divide for decades, and
everyone knew it. But people still like to wax poetic about the Olympic spirit
which is supposed to represent some sort of hazy oasis of goodwill untarnished
by bigotry or politics.
But is any of
that true? Maybe we can clear some of the smoke from the haziness.
You can’t really
understand true Olympic spirit until you understand what happened in Munich in
1972. And you can’t really understand Munich 1972, without first understanding
Berlin 1936.
The 1936 Olympics are
most happily remembered for Jesse Owens’ magnificent track performance, where
he won four gold medals for the United States and demonstrated to the world
that there was nothing superior about Aryan athletes.
That is what we like
to remember. But 1936 was about much more than just Jesse Owens.
There was controversy
from the start. Newspapers worldwide were informing their readers about German
persecution of Jews, Gypsies, and communists. Germany had removed almost
all Jews and Gypsies from their Olympic team, including Gypsy middleweight
boxing champion Johann Trollmann and Jewish high jumper Gretel Bergmann. Bergmann learned that she had been barred from the
team after breaking the German woman’s high jump record in the Olympic
trials. She was also informed that her record had been expunged. Several
countries considered boycotting the Olympics, including USA. However,
former US Olympic athlete and then current head of the US Olympic Team, Avery
Brundage, changed his mind after a trip to Germany where he was wined, dined,
and taken to a special athletic training course created just for
Jews.
In the end, Hitler
played host to the United States and 50 other countries – the largest number
ever gathered together since the modern Olympics commenced in 1896. He
greeted the athletes in a new 110,000-seat stadium, the largest ever built at
the time, and many athletes greeted him back with the straight-arm Nazi salute
as they marched by during opening ceremonies.
The Games proceeded
as smoothly as Germany could have hoped. In order to avoid negative
publicity during the Olympic period, the usual “Jews not Wanted” signs were
removed from stores, and the virulently anti-Semitic newspaper, Der Stürmer, was removed from newsstands. Other German
newspapers and magazines avoided printing inflammatory articles.
Meanwhile, on the
United States team, two superb Jewish track stars, Marty Glickman and Sam
Stoller, were informed on the day of the event that they would not be running
in their scheduled 4x100 meter relay. Instead, Jesse Owens and Ralph
Metcalfe, clearly two of the greatest runners ever, would replace them.
But the US was already expected to win the relay, so why substitute Owens and
Metcalfe in that race among all
possible races and runners? Glickman, who later gained fame as a sports
announcer, said that he believed Avery Brundage had pressured the American
track coach to replace Stoller and him not because they might lose but because
they were expected to win. According
to Glickman “…it was enough humiliation for Germany to have black
Americans winning gold medals, but having Jews on the gold medal victory stand
was too much'' (as reported by Ira Berkow in The New York Times).
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Thirty-six years
later, the Olympics were held in Munich, and Germany was ready to show the
world that it had changed. Things went wrong, fast.
On September 5, 1972,
Palestinian terrorists from the Fatah “Black September” movement climbed over a
low-security fence into the Olympic village, armed with machine guns and hand
grenades, and invaded the Israeli compound. They killed two Israeli
athletes during a fight, dumped the naked corpse of one of them out the window,
took nine others hostage, and demanded that Israel release 234 Palestinian
prisoners and Germany release two others. A captivated world community
followed the unfolding drama on television even while the Olympic Games,
themselves, continued unabated.
When both Germany and
Israel refused their demands, the terrorists demanded a plane to take them to
Egypt.
The plan to save the
Israeli hostages at the airport was completely botched. A special unit of
German police who were part of a daring operation to ambush the terrorists literally
quit in the middle of the exercise. Police officers who remained on duty
discovered that their radios didn’t work, and they had no way to
communicate. German armored cars on the way to the airport to intercept
the terrorists got stuck in traffic.
In the final
shoot-out at the airport, there were more terrorists then police
officers. Realizing that they couldn’t escape, the terrorists
killed all nine hostages from the Israeli Olympic Team. German police
killed five terrorists and captured three survivors who were imprisoned to
await trial. But they didn’t stay there for long.
Less than two months
later, members of the Black September group hijacked a Lufthansa
airline on October 29 and demanded that Germany release the three terrorists.
Everything happened fast. The hijacking lacked the usual violence.
Germany immediately acceded to the demands. Rumors leaked that Germany
and the Black September group staged the entire hijacking as a means to
rid Germany of the captured terrorists. Were the rumors true?
Years later, two
different documentaries, ESPN/ABC's The Tragedy of the Munich Games and
Kevin Macdonald’s award-winning One Day in September, revived the
collusion theory with information and testimonies that the Lufthansa hijacking
was staged (including a corroborative statement from a former German minister).
In his book, Why
Terrorism Works, Allan Dershowitz also supports this theory. He claims that both Palestinian and
German sources confirmed that Chancellor Willy Brandt and the Palestinian
authority had concocted the phony hijacking to get the captured terrorists off
German soil.
The point here is
that there was no difference between the political maneuvering inside the
Olympics beginning with IOC’s mishandling
of the crisis to resume playtime
as usual and that which occurred outside
the Olympic village where Germany aimed to rid itself of the captured
terrorists to resume business as usual.
The Munich Olympic Games
continued for twelve hours after the first two Israelis had been killed.
Only in response to international criticism did the German Olympic team and IOC
President Avery Brundage agree to suspend Olympic play. Yes, this was the
same Avery Brundage who had led the US Olympic team to a controversial appearance
in Berlin in 1936.
After the massacre,
the Olympic Committee suspended activities for one day and held a memorial
service before 80,000 people and 3,000 athletes where Brundage spoke. He
compared the terrorist event to the ongoing debate about professionalism in
sports, said very little about the murdered Israeli athletes, and concluded
with a rousing declaration that “The show must go on!” The audience
cheered. In her recent article, Jewish
Blood is Cheep, Holocaust historian Deborah Lipstadt recounts that sports
writer Red Smith described the service as more of a pep rally than a memorial.
The show went
on.
And now, 40 years later, the International Olympic Committee
has rejected a request for a minute of silence during the opening ceremonies to
honor the murdered Israeli athletes. Last week, current IOC president Jacques Rogges
told family members and relatives of the murdered Israeli athletes that it would contradict the spirit of
the event.
He
couldn’t be further from the truth. The murder of eleven
Israeli Olympic athletes contradicted the spirit of the event, and denying a
minute of silence to commemorate the victims demonstrated weakness if not a
blatant disregard for the Olympic ideals Mr. Rogges has sworn to support.
A
minute of silence would have honored the Olympic
principle of respect and concern of all those in the Olympic family regardless
of national, ethnic, or religious roots.
Rogges rejected the
minute of silence for the Israelis “on principle” even though, Lipstadt notes, he
led a minute of silence in the 2010 Olympic games to remember a Georgian luger killed
in an accident and the 2002 Olympics began with a moment of silence to honor
those killed in 9/11.
It is impossible to
disentangle politics from the Olympics, and pretending otherwise simply allows
a smoother path for those with a political agenda. The Berlin Olympics
enabled Hitler to whitewash the transgressions of Nazism before a world
audience – a world that played along with the pretense that the games transcended
politics. Munich became the stage for murder and terrorism –
political acts based on nationalistic goals and religious bias. The slow
response by the IOC to suspend the games during the crises was a decision with
political overtones.
Interestingly, many
countries expressed support for a minute of silence, including Canada, England,
Germany, Australia, Italy and the United States. Both Obama and
Romney said they supported the moment of silence. So why did Rogges
oppose it?
As reported by
Benjamin Weinthal in The National Review, Ankie Spitzer, the widow of Israeli
fencing coach Andre Spitzer who spearheaded the minute of silence efforts, claims
Rogges admitted that “his hands were tied.” The reason Rogges believed his hand were tied was because
the 46-member bloc of Arab and Muslim countries threatened to boycott the Games
if the Olympic committee honored the slain Israelis.
Which would
have been a political statement.
The reality is that
there is no border — no oasis — that separates the Olympics from
politics. There are only political decisions made in the context of the
Olympics that affirm or contradict the ideal of reverence and respect for all
athletes.
Berlin and
Munich contradicted this ideal.
So did the decision
to reject the minute of silence.
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1 comment:
Excellent post, David. The IOC's denial of the request for a minute of silence in memory of the slain Israeli athletes in Munich did indeed contradict the spirit of the Olympic games. It was a cowardly capitulation to an empty threat by Israel's enemies that they would boycott the London games.
You made wonderful use of history to place this latest situation in context.
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