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  • 6
    Aug
    2012
    9:27pm, EDT

    Olympics officials accused of anti-Semitism over Munich remembrance

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Ankie Spitzer, the widow of a Munich attack victim, addresses a memorial event Monday at the Guildhall in London.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON -- At a ceremony Monday to remember 11 Israeli athletes and coaches killed at the 1972 Munich Games, top Olympics' official Jacques Rogge came under sustained attack over the refusal to honor the dead with a minute’s silence at the opening ceremony of London 2012.

    As he sat among a crowd of some 850 people in London’s Guildhall, Rogge heard several speakers condemn the International Olympic Committee’s decision to reject calls from the Israeli, U.S. and other governments for a tribute to the victims of a Palestinian terrorist group to be held during a prominent part of the Games.


    The Guildhall ceremony was organized by the Olympic Committee of Israel, the Israeli Embassy to the U.K. and the Jewish community. U.K. politicians including a cabinet secretary, Jeremy Hunt, and London’s mayor, Boris Johnson, lit candles in memory of the dead Olympians.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    They were killed in September 1972 by members of the Black September group who broke into the Olympic Village and took several members of the Israeli team hostage. Two Israelis died as they tried to fight the attackers; nine others and a German police officer died during a failed rescue attempt.

    At the Guildhall ceremony, Ankie Spitzer, widow of fencing referee and coach Andre Spitzer, 27, received a standing ovation after an impassioned speech in which she accused Olympic officials of anti-Semitism.

    Slideshow: Athletes killed at 1972 Munich Olympics

    Keystone / Getty Images

    Eleven Israeli athletes and coaches were killed by Palestinian gunmen during the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Germany.

    Launch slideshow

    “Shame on the IOC because you have forsaken the 11 members of your Olympic family. You are discriminating against them because they are Israelis and Jews,” she said.

    'Gentle and peaceful' husband
    She said she remembered the “excitement and dreams” of her “peaceful and gentle” husband when he was chosen to go to the Olympics.

    They were “probably the same dreams Jacques Rogge and [former U.K. athlete and chairman of the London 2012 Games] Sebastian Coe had when they went to the Olympic Games -- the only difference is our loved ones came home in coffins,” Spitzer said.

    She said support for a minute of silence in memory of the Munich Massacre had come from all over the world and “only the International Olympic Committee remained deaf and blind,” prompting a cry of “shame, shame” from the audience.

    Widow of Munich Olympics massacre victim: Switch off IOC chief's speech

    Ilana Romano, widow of weightlifter Yossef Romano, 31, spoke of how she had told her children -- then ages 6, 4 and 18 months -- that their father had been killed.

    “I will never forget that moment when I hugged them, and I could see their lips trembling and their eyes welling up and one question in their mouth: Mom, will dad never come back?” she said, according to a translation of her speech. “I answered in tears: Correct.”

    She said they had been asking for 40 years for “one minute of silence in honor and remembrance of the dead sons of the Olympic movement.”

    Romano said she had asked Rogge, the IOC president, during a face-to-face meeting if any other nation’s athletes had been killed “would you have kept quiet.”

    She said he had replied that this was a “very difficult question,” a reply she said had “hurt and offended” them. “One could feel the discrimination in the air,” she added.

    Olympic ideals 'violated'
    Romano said Rogge would be remembered as an athlete – present at the 1972 Games – who became president and “violated the Olympic Charter calls for brotherhood, friendship and peace.

    Rogge also spoke briefly and was applauded politely when he took to the stage and also when he left.

    Judo medalist helps subdue 'drunken' Olympic bottle-thrower

    “We share a duty to these innocent victims and to history to make sure that the lessons of 1972 are never forgotten,” he said, without addressing the calls for a minute’s silence during an official Olympic event.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    An audience of 850 at the event, including many members of the Jewish community, listens to speakers talk about their experiences during the 1972 Games in Munich and their desire for the IOC to formally recognize those killed during the Games in London.

    At the start of the Guildhall ceremony, the Israeli Olympic team competing in London took to the stage to applause from the crowd.

    Speaking earlier, Israeli swimmer Gal Nevo, who reached the semi-finals of the 200 and 400 individual medley events at London 2012, told NBCNews.com that “you always, as an Israeli, worry a little bit when you travel, especially when you represent Israel.”

    Read more about the Olympics from NBC News

    “This whole ceremony … I wish it was on a bigger stage, not just for the Israeli and Jewish community,” he said. “I think it’s very important everybody remembers what happened and to tell everyone that it can happen again if we’re not aware.”

    However Nevo said the level of security in London was such that “I personally – and I can speak for the rest of us – feel very safe… we feel that someone is taking care of this.”

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    212 comments

    Rogge is nothing but a whimpering, low life politician who didn't want to respect and honor the Israeli athletes killed by the muslim arab scum because "he was afraid the arabs would leave"..read the article. The tragedy of this was a black mark on the olympics and each time there is an olympiad the …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, uk, london, olympics, jacques-rogge, silence, 1972, munich-massacre, ankie-spitzer
  • 17
    May
    2012
    2:01pm, EDT

    Israel slams Olympic committee over Munich massacre tribute

    Charly Diaz Azcue / Getty Images file

    Danny Ayalon, Israeli diplomat and politician who currently serves as Deputy Foreign Minister, during an interview on March 18, 2012 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    An Israeli official on Thursday attacked the International Olympic Committee after it apparently refused to allow a minute's silence at the start of this year's games in memory of 11 Israeli athletes and coaches massacred by Palestinian militants in the 1972 Munich Olympics.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon had asked the IOC to commemorate those killed on the 40th anniversary of their deaths.


    In his written response, IOC President Jacques Rogge did not specifically address the request of a minute's silence, The Associated Press reported. 

    Instead, he said he would personally attend the Israeli delegation's traditional tribute to the victims in London and pointed out that the IOC has officially paid tribute to the victims' memory before. "Please rest assured that, within the Olympic family, the memory of the victims of the terrible massacre in Munich in 1972 will never fade away," Rogge wrote. 

    'This tragedy is yours alone'
    On Thursday Ayalon said the reply was "unacceptable as it rejects the central principles of global fraternity on which the Olympic ideal is supposed to rest," The Times of Israel reported.

    “The terrorist murders of the Israeli athletes were not just an attack on people because of their nationality and religion; it was an attack on the Olympic Games and the international community,” he said.

    “This rejection told us as Israelis that this tragedy is yours alone and not a tragedy within the family of nations," he added. "This is a very disappointing approach and we hope that this decision will be overturned so the international community as one can remember, reflect and learn the appropriate lesson from this dark stain on Olympic history.”

    IOC spokesman Mark Adams told The Associated Press that the Olympic body takes the issue "very, very seriously," but felt that an event at the Guildhall venue in London was "the most appropriate way to pay tribute to the athletes during the games in London." 

    Dec. 7: NBC's Martin Fletcher reports on Steven Spielberg's new film, "Munich," about the Olympics in 1972.

    The 1972 Munich Olympics were the first games held in Germany since the 1936 edition in Berlin, and were meant to erase the images of the competition held under the Nazi regime. 

    Will $95-million cable car be ready for Olympics?

    But in the second week of the Munich Games, eight members of the Black September militant group penetrated the minimally secured Olympic Village and took Israeli team members hostage. A day later, all 11 were dead. 

    German police killed five of the eight assassins during a failed rescue attempt. The games were briefly suspended.

    The 2005 Steven Spielberg movie Munich gives a fictionalized account of secret attempts by the Israeli government to track down and kill those it thought responsible for the killings.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    102 comments

    Looks like the Olympic Committee is in serious need of a spine donor.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, israel, london, olympics, killed, palestinian, athletes, munich, silence, 1972

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