London – IOC President Jacques Rogge Honors Israelis

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    Jacques Rogge, President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), attends a press conference in the Main Press Center at the Olympic park in London, Britain, 21 July 2012. The London 2012 Olympic Games will start on 27 July 2012.  EPA/MICHAEL KAPPELERLondon – IOC President Jacques Rogge paid tribute Monday to the 11 Israeli athletes and coaches killed in Munich 40 years ago, leading a solemn minute of silence in the athletes village.

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    It was the first time the IOC has honored the slain Israelis in a ceremony inside an Olympic village.

    Rogge has repeatedly rebuffed calls to hold a moment of silence during Friday’s opening ceremony of the London Games. He said Saturday the opening was not the appropriate place to remember the Israeli team members killed by Palestinian gunmen at the 1972 Munich Olympics.

    On Monday, Rogge chose a different venue and occasion to hold a special observance.

    “I would like to start today’s ceremony by honoring the memory of the 11 Israeli Olympians who shared the ideals that have brought us together in this beautiful Olympic Village,” Rogge said. “The 11 victims of the Munich tragedy believed in that vision.

    “They came to Munich in the spirit of peace and solidarity. We owe it to them to keep the spirit alive and to remember them.”

    Rogge bowed his head as a crowd of about 100 people — IOC executive board members, dignitaries and Olympic athletes and officials — stood in silence for a minute.

    “As the events of 40 years ago remind us, sport is not immune from and cannot cure all the ills of the world,” Rogge said.

    Rogge spoke from an outdoor stage during a ceremony promoting the Olympic Truce, a U.N.-backed initiative calling on warring parties around the world to end hostilities during the period of the games. Rogge and other officials signed the “truce wall” after the event.

    Rogge and the International Olympic Committee have come under pressure from Jewish groups and politicians in the United States, Israel and Germany to honor the Munich victims during the opening ceremony.

    “We feel that the opening ceremony is an atmosphere that is not fit to remember such a tragic incident,” Rogge said Saturday.

    Rogge and the IOC will also honor the slain Israelis at a private reception in London during the games on Aug. 6. The IOC will also take part in a ceremony in Germany on the anniversary of the attack on Sept. 5 at the military airfield of Furstenfeldbruck where most of the Israelis died.

    During the second week of the Munich Games, eight members of the Black September militant group penetrated the laxly 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.

    Rogge, who competed in sailing at the Munich Games, said Monday’s tribute was heartfelt and not a response to the demands for a commemoration during the opening ceremony.

    “It has nothing to do with the requests,” he said. “It was a spontaneous gesture from me because we are here in the Olympic Village where the athletes were killed, part of them at least. This is a place where we speak about sport and peace. It’s absolutely normal I should call for a remembrance of the Israeli athletes.

    “I couldn’t speak here in front of the athletes and the national Olympic committees about peace and sport and about the Olympic Truce without remembering or reminding the people what happened 40 years ago and the disaster that also started in the Olympic Village in Munich, so it was fitting that I would say what I feel about that.”

    The remembrance came at the end of a tour of the village by Rogge and the executive board. Rogge inspected a room in the Brazilian housing area, watched a team-welcoming ceremony featuring circus performers, chatted with British volleyball player Nathan French in the game room and sat in the cafeteria with Australian athletes who greeted him with “G’day mate.”

    Rogge, who is attending his 21st Olympics, had rave reviews for the facilities.

    “It’s a Premier League Olympic Village,” he said.


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    5 Comments
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    enlightened-yid
    enlightened-yid
    11 years ago

    NBC will do what IOC does not want to do publicly for millions of viewers to remember what happened to those Israeli Olympians.

    Mark Levin
    Mark Levin
    11 years ago

    I guess he was embarrassed by what Bob Costas said he was going to do during the broadcast.

    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    11 years ago

    He also does not want the Jewish world at large to boycott French products!! Business is bad as it is!! A boycott would kill it!!

    Peter
    Peter
    11 years ago

    So he holds a “memorial” in front of 100 people — whoopde do. Way to bury the issue and avoid hurting the feelings of the 22 Arabs nations. My anger at the IOC president has grown now that I learn that he himself was an athlete at the 1972 games. What a heartless human being he is.