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August 16, 2002/Elul 8 5762, Vol. 54, No. 48

Munich massacre remembered

TOBY AXELROD
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
BERLIN - Esther Roth will never forget the Olympic Games of 1972. They were both the highlight of her youthful athletic career and - as they became a venue for terrorism - the most horrible moment.

"My coach was very happy because I had my best results for him. It was like a dream," said Roth, a former hurdle jumper who is currently in Munich to cheer on Israel's team in the European athletic championships. She spoke to the JTA by phone last week from Munich's Olympic Stadium.

Roth's coach, Amitzur Shapira, was one of 11 Israeli athletes killed by Palestinian terrorists during the Olympic Games in Munich on Sept. 7, 1972.

"Being around here makes me remember everything that happened 30 years ago," she said

On Aug. 11, Roth joined 23 family members of the murdered athletes in a ceremony at a memorial near the stadium. Israeli Ambassador to Germany Shimon Stein and representatives of the local Jewish community attended the event, which was organized by the Israeli Light Athletics Association together with its European counterpart.

Together, they recalled the day when Israeli athletes were taken hostage by members of the Palestinian Black September guerrilla group. The terrorists killed their hostages during a botched rescue attempt by German police at the Fursten-feldbruck military airport.

During the one-hour ceremony, a large stone tablet was placed at the bridge linking the former Olympic village to the Olympic stadium. An Israeli flag was draped across the tablet.

Today, for the first time since 1972, Israeli athletes are living in the same complex in which the hostages were taken. But much more security is provided now, Roth said.

Jack Cohen, who is general secretary of the Israeli Light Athletics Association, said he did not want any special treatment for the Israeli team.

"We are like any other team, pleased to be here," said Cohen, who as a 12-year-old watched the 1972 Games on television in Tel Aviv.

"Of course remembrance is important," he said. "That is one reason why we are here also: To show that we are here again and we are continuing what was stopped 30 years ago. It is very exciting."

Some of the young Israeli athletes clearly felt connected to the events of 1972, though they were born long afterward. Long-distance runner Nili Avramski ran her races with the number "72" written on one hand and "11" on the other.

Ankie Spitzer, widow of fencing trainer Andre Spitzer, chose not to attend the Aug. 11 ceremony. Spitzer, now a spokeswoman for the families of the murdered athletes, reportedly has been struggling for two decades to win compensation from Germany.

There was no investigation of the events until 1992, when files were smuggled from Germany to Israel. Since then, the city of Munich, the state of Bavaria and the German federal government have offered about $3 million to the families of the athletes, a belated and indirect admission of partial responsibility.


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