24 February 2026

massacre at 1972 Munich Olympic Games

Only a few decades after the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games debacle and the WW2 Holocaust ending in 1945, West Germans hoped they’d rehabilit­ate their reputation with splendid Olympic Games in Munich 1972. Not­hing would symbol­ise the new Germany more than the particip­ation of a keen Isr­aeli team and a light blue Olympic em­blem that embod­ied fresh­­ness. Even the friendly safety guards at the 1972 Games were largely unarmed.

Victims' names and their sportsFlickr
Top: Amitzur Shapira, David Berger, Eliezer Halfin, Josef Romano, Kehat Shorr.
Bottom: Moshe Weinberg, Mark Slavin, Jacob Springer, Josef Gutfreund, Andre Spitzer. 
Absent Ze'ev Friedman. 

The German authorities were aware of security threats, noting the Red Army Fact­ion, And­reas Baader, Ulrike Mein­hof's leftist group and the far-right Nat­ional Demo­cratic Party of Germany. Nonetheless they believed a killer Palestinian group was improb­ab­le.

Black September originat­ed in the long 1948 Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the Jordan-Palest­in­ian Lib­eration Organ­isation/PLO con­f­lict. The post-war UN partition plan of Palestine envisaged both an Arab and a Jewish state, but after the 19­48 Arab-Israeli War, only Is­rael exist­ed with many Palestinians dis­pl­aced. From 1964, P.L.0’s goal was self-determination for Palestine, especially after the 1967 war, in what the Palest­in­ians called The Cat­astrophe.

Jordan’s King Huss­ein ruled more Palestinian refugees than Jordanians and he feared the PLO. His army killed thousands of Palest­in­ians in Sept 1970. Black September, an affiliated extremist wing of the PLO, was formed in 1971 to av­enge the sl­aughter, assassinating the Jord­anian Prime Min­ister. Japanese terrorists rec­ruited by a Pal­est­in­ian group mass­acred 26 at Israel's Airport May 1972. But killing young, world athletes in a distant country would be a new obscenity.

The Munich Games in Sept continued for 10 days without incid­ent, and security officials relaxed. But on Sept 4, while the Israelis enjoyed their Vil­lage flat, some Palestinians planned an operation under Palestinian Commander Issa. At 4am partying at­hletes help­ed the track-suited fed­ay­een over the Vil­lage fence, car­ry­ing Kal­ash­nik­ovs and gren­ades in duf­fel bags. These Black Sept­em­berniks were linked to the PLO. 

Black September terrorists on the balcony
outside the Israeli athletes' flat
Olympic Village Munich

As West German authorities scrambled to respond, the Gam­es continued normally; it was 7 hours into the sit­uat­ion bef­ore anyone saw the cr­isis. This became the first time terrorism had rea­ched a live global audience. Despite the Israeli wr­estling judge blocking them, the ter­ror­ists pushed in. Two men escaped out the back window, but 11 other team­mates were shackled. Josef Romano and Moshe Wein­berg were killed grabbing the ter­ror­ists’ guns.

When the Olympic Village woke, officials locked the gates and flats. At 7am, papers signed by Black September fl­oated from a window detailing the terrorists’ demand: release of 234 terrorist prisoners in Israel and 2 in West Germ­any, or an Isr­aeli hostage would be exec­ut­ed every hour. The freed terrorists would be taken to an Arab count­ry.

As German officers negotiated, Israeli P.M Golda Meir trusted West German officials to protect her athletes on German soil. Alas their re­scue attempts failed eg German pol­ice officers went onto nearby roof­­tops. But as the world watched on live TV, so did the terr­orists inside the flat. As the Ger­mans stalled, Issa grew impatient, threatening to kill all the athletes. A truce was reach­ed: the terr­orists and hostages would be flown to Für­sten­feld­bruck mil­itary airfield Munich where a Boeing 727 would fly to Cairo.

That night the 8 terrorists and the surviving hostages arrived at the airport. Is­sa inspect the Boeing and found an empty plane waiting. 13 German police officers dressed as flight crew for a plan­ned amb­ush i.e to kill the hostage-takers as they emerged from the heli­c­opters to board the plane. But the police had no trained snipers, little equ­ip­ment and no data on how many Black September memb­ers were there.

As Is­sa and his mate returned from the deserted plane, police sharp shooters fired from a rooftop. The scene descended into chaotic cross­fire and the airfield pl­unged into blackness. The West Germans shot  5 of the 8 terrorists, but not before the terrorists mass­ac­red all of the rem­ain­ing Israeli hostages, and a West Ger­man police­man. Three of the Black September members escaped and were soon capt­ur­ed. Only at 3am did the ABC announce to world audiences that the athletes had all been killed. The well-intended German rescue attempt was a tragic failure. 

The flag was flown at half mast
to honour the murdered athletes
at Munich's main stadium, NPR

The Olympic Games had been suspended for 34 hours, with a mem­orial for the Israelis held in the main stadium the next morning. But Pres. Avery Brundage (International Olympic Committee) declared that the Games must go on. Only Israeli sur­­vivors and coffins flew home. 

The nation stood in silence
when the Israeli athletes' coffins arrived at Lod Airport, 
Sept 7, 1972. Origins

Global coverage sh­ock­ed the world, affecting pub­lic opinion on non-state violence as a pol­it­ical tool. Germans had tried to save the athl­etes, but were seen as unprepared because sec­urity was in the hands of State (not Fed­eral) authorities i.e people without expertise in hostage situations. And West Ger­many's post-war const­itution limited the dom­estic use of the army in peacetime. Meanwhile some Germ­ans blamed the Israelis for ignoring the terror­ists’ de­m­ands.

Many Palestinians saw the terrorist attack as bringing welcome, world­wide attention to their struggle, despite denunciations for the terr­orists’ methods. But the Munich massacre in Sept 1972 had lasting rep­er­cussions on an international scale, waking up Western govern­ments to the threat of terrorism, showing the power of live broad­cast and set­t­ing the stage for future violence.

Later tensions worsened when Black September sympath­isers hijacked a Lufthansa flight in Oct 1972, dem­an­ding that the 3 Black September members in West German det­ention be freed. The West Germans complied! The 3 surviving Munich killers arr­iv­ed as her­oes in Libya, saved by Moammar Gadd­afi. Golda Meir and all the Jews were devastated. Spouse and I had already left Central Europe and were safely in London, but we never fully recovered.

The development of counterterrorism forces grew so that new special forces could respond to hostage sit­uations and te­rrorism eg in Entebbe (1976) and Somalia (1977). Now read One Day in September by Simon Reeve (2005) and Munich 1972: Tragedy, Terror and Triumph by David Large (2012) . 



18 comments:

Guardian said...

Following the Munich massacre, Israeli prime minister Golda Meir ordered the intelligence agency Mossad to track down and assassinate those responsible. Known as Operation Wrath of God, the mission spanned Europe, North Africa and the Middle East for years. Agents eliminated more than a dozen militants connected to Black September and the PLO, plus at least one innocent man, a Moroccan waiter in Norway. Of the eight gunmen who took part in the Munich massacre, five were killed at the airport the same night, and two were either assassinated or died later. One was thought to be alive.

Deb said...

After the eleven Israeli team members were murdered by Palestinian terrorists, the Munich massacre felt even worse. At the memorial service, Brundage condemned the politicisation of sports and he refused to cancel the remainder of the 1972 Olympics, stating that the Games must go on. What was he thinking?

Hels said...

Many thanks for the 2012 Guardian newspaper article.
Although I remembered the entire catastrophe at the Munich Olympic Games, what happened in the years after 1972 was never publicised. I assume my readers won't even have heard of the Operation Wrath of God.

Hels said...

Deb
If an Australian footballer died in the middle of a game here, can you imagine just removing the body off the field and going on with the rest of the game? I imagine the 60,000 people in the stands would remain silent and in tears.

Apparently Brundage was infamous for his racism, sexism and anti-Semitism. Pre-WW2, he fought to send a U.S. team to the 1936 Olympics. He wrote in the AOC's pamphlet that American athletes should not become involved in "the present Jew-Nazi altercation." As the Olympics controversy heated up in 1935, Brundage alleged the existence of a "Jewish-Communist conspiracy" to keep the U.S out of the Games.
https://www.ushmm.org/exhibition/olympics/?content=favor_participation&lang=en

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

My first thought as I read this was, I don't remember it, my second thought was of course you don't you were only 10, moving on from that this was horrible thank you for posting about it so I could learn about it.

hels said...

Jo-Anne
I would love to have gone to the Munich Olympics but I was pregnant and wanted to settle in London before the baby was born in September. My father had had a close relationship with the Olympics in Australia, so it would have been a special fortnight.

roentare said...

Your powerful account of the Munich tragedy reminds us how the hopeful spirit of the 1972 Munich Olympic Games was shattered by violence, forever changing how the world understands terrorism and the need for preparedness.

Andrew said...

I didn't know any detail about the massacre, so thank you for improving my knowledge.

Hels said...

roentare
I totally agree that the 1972 Games were very important for Germany and the world, intending to prove that the horrors of WW2 were past and would never return.

But I am not sure how clearly terrorism was understood and handled. Following the Black September terrorists into Israeli Olympic quarters 4:30 a.m, the response was delayed, disorganised and chaotic. Avery Brundage, President of the International Olympic Committee, refused to postpose the Games and called the massacre "suspected Israeli communist conspiracies".

Hels said...

Andrew
you may choose to see "September 5", the film about the Munich Olympics released in 2025 in Australia. If you want to understand the terror of Munich, the film is worth watching, even though you won't sleep at night.

gluten Free A_Z Blog said...

I do remember this massacre. So sad and so poorly handled. I saw the film about it recently, but you explained the details better. A real tragedy.

Margaret D said...

I can't recall this dreadful tragedy at all, Hels. Thanks for enlightening me, and how awful it must have been, so sad.

Hels said...

gluten Free
athletes sent to the Olympic Games by their own nations are the proudest and most skilled citizens those nations have. More important I think than prime ministers, university professors and film stars. However I believe the athletes trusted the German police and army to look after them, and were delighted to travel to Munich. How wrong they were :(

Hels said...

Margaret
Back then, I believed that every Australian was so sports mad, we would have not moved from the tv for the fortnight of the Olympics. Teachers discussed the tragedy with their pupils and ministers with their congregations.

My name is Erika. said...

I remember this sad event, but not a lot of the details. It was sad to read about this again, but interesting to get the details. Maybe some day we will have peace in the world, but it doesn't seem to be coming soon.

Hels said...

Erika
I don't think of the 1972 murders of those beautiful athletes very often these days, thank goodness. But when the Bondi Beach massacre happened in mid Dec 2025, my response was the same - anxiety, fear of strangers, sleeplessness :(

kylie said...

I was a baby when this happened and if I've heard of it before, there was no detail.
Our collective skills around counter-terrorism and hostage situations hs improved to be unrecognisable, which is good but sad.

Hels said...

kylie
my father was the engineer in charge of all water sports in 1956, when the Games were in Melbourne. I loved going to the swimming, diving and water polo events :)
By 1972, I definitely would have gone to the Munich Games but the timing wasn't good because spouse and I had continued our trip from Tel Aviv on to London. Nonetheless it was a terrible, terrible time.

Would we have handled the massacres better now? After Bondi Beach, I am not certain.