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Tags: olympics | munich | massacre | commemoration

IOC Holds Surprise Munich Massacre Commemoration

Tuesday, 24 July 2012 05:46 AM EDT

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) paid a surprise tribute to the 11 Israeli team members who were killed at the 1972 Munich Games on Monday, marking the event for the first time in an Olympic village.

IOC President Jacques Rogge, who on Saturday had ruled out marking the 40th anniversary of the Munich massacre at the London Games opening ceremony, said the 11 victims deserved to be remembered.

The IOC has never marked the event at any of the previous games athletes' villages.

A minute's silence was observed after Rogge's comments.

Among those at the ceremony were Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London Olympic organizing committee; London Mayor Boris Johnson; Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt; and several IOC officials.

"I would like to start today's ceremony by honoring the memory of 11 Israeli Olympians who shared the ideals and 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." he said. "We owe it to them to keep that spirit alive and to remember them."

"SPONTANEOUS SUGGESTION"

Rogge said that while sport had the ability to unite, it could not solve all the world's problems.

"As the event of 40 years ago reminds us, sport is not immune from, and cannot cure, all the ills of the world."

Following the ceremony Johnson pumped his fist and said: "Great speech."

"It was a spontaneous suggestion," Rogge told a small group of reporters after his speech. "This is indeed the first time that it has happened in the Olympic village."

"I could not speak here about peace and sport without reminding what happened 40 years ago," said Rogge, who competed at the Munich Olympics as a sailor.

Family members of the athletes, coaches, and officials who were killed by Palestinian gunmen during the Munich Olympics have tried for four decades to persuade the IOC to organize an official commemoration.

Their calls were backed in recent days by President Barack Obama as well as other politicians around the world.

Rogge said his decision to mark that anniversary in such a way was not aimed at ending calls for a minute's silence during the opening ceremony.

"The intention was not to calm anyone," he said.

© 2023 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


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2012-46-24
Tuesday, 24 July 2012 05:46 AM
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