Grieving families follow the caskets of their loved ones during the memorial held for the 11 Israeli Olympic team members, killed by Palestinian terrorists after being kept hostage for almost 18 hours. Israel, Sep. 7, 1972. (AP Photo) ISRAEL OUT

The right time for a moment of silence

This editorial is from the Washington Post:

On Friday, the 2012 Olympic Games will open with a reported $40 million extravaganza, featuring 15,000 performers and 25,000 costumes under the orchestration of "Slumdog Millionaire" director Danny Boyle. Boyle's production is rumored to include actor Daniel Craig (a.k.a. James Bond) jumping out of a helicopter and ringing a 30-ton bell, a landscape decorated with several dozen live animals, and dancers and trapeze artists, dressed in Sgt. Pepper-like attire, cavorting to the Beatles' greatest hits.

Regrettably, though, the International Olympic Committee found that it could not spare 60 seconds to pay tribute to 11 athletes slain at the Munich Olympics 40 years ago.

For much of those 40 years, families of the slain members of the Israeli team have appealed to the IOC for a moment of silence at an Olympic Games. Ankie Spitzer, the widow of 1972 Israel fencing coach Andrei Spitzer, gathered more than 100,000 signatures in support.

The White House and the Israeli Knesset, as well as representatives in the German and Italian governments, backed Spitzer's petition. Still, the IOC refused to schedule a minute of silence in its nearly three-hour opening ceremony.

IOC President Jacques Rogge explained that "the opening ceremony is an atmosphere that is not fit to remember such a tragic incident." Instead, Rogge attended a moment of silence Monday in the Olympic village. The IOC also plans to acknowledge the Munich victims by participating in an Aug. 6 reception at London's Guildhall and attending a Sept. 5 ceremony at the airfield in Fuerstenfeldbruck, where much of the massacre, by the Palestinian terrorist group Black September, took place.

But only 100 people or so attended Monday's little-publicized moment of silence. The Israeli Embassy, Israeli Olympic Committee and the Jewish community in London will put on the Aug. 6 event, and the IOC's participation will be minimal.

That same day, 22 gold medals will be awarded across eight sports, while events in 12 other sports take place, drawing attention away from whatever Rogge has planned for the Guildhall reception.

The Zionist Federation will host the Sept. 5 ceremony, long after the Olympics is over.

The Munich massacre was not just an Israeli tragedy; it was an Olympic tragedy and a world tragedy. Forty years after the awful event, the fallen athletes deserve to be remembered at Friday's opening ceremony, in front of 80,000 spectators and an estimated 4 billion TV viewers worldwide.

Rogge's priorities do no credit to the Olympic movement

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