The bookends to my bar mitzvah were the murder of 11 Israeli Olympic athletes in the 1972 summer games in Munich, and the Yom Kippur War in October 1973.
Born in New York, raised in South Florida, neither of these events involved me directly. And yet both represented an ominous rite of passage. I am not sure I would be writing these bi-monthly essays had the world not initiated me early on to the dangers of being a Jew.
With the Tokyo Olympics in Japan set to commence this week, it’s worth remembering all that has happened, and not happened, in the intervening 49 years since the Munich Olympic games. At the time, the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) was itself only eight years old—three years before the Six-Day War in which Israel recaptured the West Bank and Gaza Strip. That means “Israeli settlements” could not have given birth to Palestinian terrorism. Not a single Jew lived in the West Bank and Gaza in 1964. The chant, “From the river to the Sea, Palestine will be free,” means just what it says: rid all of Israel of its Jews.
With the Tokyo Olympics in Japan set to commence this week, it’s worth remembering all that has happened, and not happened, in the intervening 49 years since the Munich Olympic games.
The PLO back then specialized in airplane hijacks (and a lone Palestinian assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, who might have otherwise been elected president in 1968). The Munich Massacre, as it later was to be called, took place a mere 24 years into Israel’s nationhood. In 1972, Israel had no chance of medaling in any event. So soon after Auschwitz, Jewish athletes marching behind the Israeli flag was itself an extraordinary achievement.
Black September, the name the Munich terrorists gave themselves, entered the Olympic Village compound. Security was porous, but then again, the entire mission must have seemed so improbable with the whole world watching.
Nine Israeli Olympians were kidnapped; two had already been killed at the dormitory. The German military was prevented from assisting local police; so, too, were Israeli commandos. Eventually, all nine hostages were killed in a botched rescue attempt.
Shocking, or perhaps not so, the games went on—without a memorial service. Why dampen the global mood? An official ceremony would not take place until 2016.
The Palestinian terrorists captured on the tarmac were eventually set free in exchange for German hostages taken during yet another Palestinian airplane hijacking. Over several years, Israel would assassinate those responsible for the crime.
Ironically, it was at the Munich Olympics that Jewish-American swimmer, Mark Spitz, from Los Angeles, won seven Olympic Gold Medals, a record at the time. The world’s fastest human in water was sprinted away to America in case he, too, became a target.
Germany was jinxed for Jewish athletes even before 1972. Berlin was the site of the Olympic games shortly before the Holocaust. In 1936, Adolf Hitler hosted the games as a showcase of Aryan superiority. Someone forgot to tell American track and field superstar, Jesse Owens. He went on to win four Olympic Gold Medals. The Fuhrer was furious. But it could have been worse: Owens could have been a Jew.
Well, Owens sort of stepped into the running shoes of Jews destined for their own Olympic glory. A sidenote to his achievement was that two Jewish-American sprinters were tapped to run the 4×100-meter relay. At the last moment, both were replaced by Owens and another Black sprinter, sparing Hitler the nightmare scenario of seeing genetically inferior Jews on the victory podium.
Hitler had already ensured that no German Jew would medal at Berlin. Two Jewish women, a high-jumper and a fencer, were unceremoniously removed from the German team before the games began. Yet, making the Olympics judenrein was nevertheless thwarted. World class Jewish athleticism was not unknown in Europe. Despite all that antisemitic benching, 13 Jews from around the world (six from Hungary) medaled during the Nazi Olympics.
The pageantry of the German Olympics was majestic, but the Master Race lost a lot of races in Munich.
As for the Yom Kippur War, well, that says it all: Egypt and Syria attacked Israel on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, while the nation was fasting. Israel’s preparedness was abysmal. After heavy early losses, Israel battled back. The Sinai Peninsula looked like a mortuary of tank carcasses as Israel’s army moved closer to Cairo. If not for a jointly-called American-Soviet ceasefire, Israel might have captured the pyramids built by its enslaved ancestors before the Exodus.
It was all yet another reminder that even on Yom Kippur, with the Book of Life still in draft form, God was not in the business of smiting the enemies of his Chosen People.
In the intervening decades, Israel signed an enduring peace treaty with Egypt, its once implacable foe. Both countries now work together to quell Palestinian terrorism. Germany and Israel are staunch allies. At the time of both the Munich Olympics and the Yom Kippur War, Israel maintained friendly relations with the Shah of Iran. Today, Iran’s Islamic theocracy, its nuclear ambitions, and its proxies in Lebanon, Syria and Gaza are cause for Israel’s concern.
Middle East conflict remains, albeit with different players and a remade regional map.
Some things may never change. At the 2016 Olympics in Brazil, judoka Or Sasson (also competing in Tokyo), won the bronze medal. Along the way he defeated an Egyptian judoka who refused to shake his hand. A female Saudi judoka forfeited a match to avoid having to compete against an Israeli woman.
The 2021 Olympics in Tokyo (yes, a year late due to the pandemic) will hold its opening ceremonies this week. Israel will march in the parade of nations. But this year it has seven athletes, and a baseball team, with a very good chance of winning medals, even the gold (especially in men’s judoka, women’s rhythmic gymnastics, women’s surfing, and an Ethiopian Jew in the marathon). Israel’s baseball team qualified as one of the six to compete for gold.
Still a speck of a country. All that European chutzpah and Sephardic resourcefulness. Israel moves fast, where and when it counts. Stay tuned: You might hear “Hatikvah” played in Tokyo.
Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro College, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. For his writings in the Jewish Journal, he won the American Jewish Press Association’s Louis Rapaport Award for Excellence in Commentary.
49 Years After Munich Massacre, Israeli Athletes will March Proudly at Tokyo Olympics
Thane Rosenbaum
The bookends to my bar mitzvah were the murder of 11 Israeli Olympic athletes in the 1972 summer games in Munich, and the Yom Kippur War in October 1973.
Born in New York, raised in South Florida, neither of these events involved me directly. And yet both represented an ominous rite of passage. I am not sure I would be writing these bi-monthly essays had the world not initiated me early on to the dangers of being a Jew.
With the Tokyo Olympics in Japan set to commence this week, it’s worth remembering all that has happened, and not happened, in the intervening 49 years since the Munich Olympic games. At the time, the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) was itself only eight years old—three years before the Six-Day War in which Israel recaptured the West Bank and Gaza Strip. That means “Israeli settlements” could not have given birth to Palestinian terrorism. Not a single Jew lived in the West Bank and Gaza in 1964. The chant, “From the river to the Sea, Palestine will be free,” means just what it says: rid all of Israel of its Jews.
The PLO back then specialized in airplane hijacks (and a lone Palestinian assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, who might have otherwise been elected president in 1968). The Munich Massacre, as it later was to be called, took place a mere 24 years into Israel’s nationhood. In 1972, Israel had no chance of medaling in any event. So soon after Auschwitz, Jewish athletes marching behind the Israeli flag was itself an extraordinary achievement.
Black September, the name the Munich terrorists gave themselves, entered the Olympic Village compound. Security was porous, but then again, the entire mission must have seemed so improbable with the whole world watching.
Nine Israeli Olympians were kidnapped; two had already been killed at the dormitory. The German military was prevented from assisting local police; so, too, were Israeli commandos. Eventually, all nine hostages were killed in a botched rescue attempt.
Shocking, or perhaps not so, the games went on—without a memorial service. Why dampen the global mood? An official ceremony would not take place until 2016.
The Palestinian terrorists captured on the tarmac were eventually set free in exchange for German hostages taken during yet another Palestinian airplane hijacking. Over several years, Israel would assassinate those responsible for the crime.
Ironically, it was at the Munich Olympics that Jewish-American swimmer, Mark Spitz, from Los Angeles, won seven Olympic Gold Medals, a record at the time. The world’s fastest human in water was sprinted away to America in case he, too, became a target.
Germany was jinxed for Jewish athletes even before 1972. Berlin was the site of the Olympic games shortly before the Holocaust. In 1936, Adolf Hitler hosted the games as a showcase of Aryan superiority. Someone forgot to tell American track and field superstar, Jesse Owens. He went on to win four Olympic Gold Medals. The Fuhrer was furious. But it could have been worse: Owens could have been a Jew.
Well, Owens sort of stepped into the running shoes of Jews destined for their own Olympic glory. A sidenote to his achievement was that two Jewish-American sprinters were tapped to run the 4×100-meter relay. At the last moment, both were replaced by Owens and another Black sprinter, sparing Hitler the nightmare scenario of seeing genetically inferior Jews on the victory podium.
Hitler had already ensured that no German Jew would medal at Berlin. Two Jewish women, a high-jumper and a fencer, were unceremoniously removed from the German team before the games began. Yet, making the Olympics judenrein was nevertheless thwarted. World class Jewish athleticism was not unknown in Europe. Despite all that antisemitic benching, 13 Jews from around the world (six from Hungary) medaled during the Nazi Olympics.
The pageantry of the German Olympics was majestic, but the Master Race lost a lot of races in Munich.
As for the Yom Kippur War, well, that says it all: Egypt and Syria attacked Israel on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, while the nation was fasting. Israel’s preparedness was abysmal. After heavy early losses, Israel battled back. The Sinai Peninsula looked like a mortuary of tank carcasses as Israel’s army moved closer to Cairo. If not for a jointly-called American-Soviet ceasefire, Israel might have captured the pyramids built by its enslaved ancestors before the Exodus.
It was all yet another reminder that even on Yom Kippur, with the Book of Life still in draft form, God was not in the business of smiting the enemies of his Chosen People.
In the intervening decades, Israel signed an enduring peace treaty with Egypt, its once implacable foe. Both countries now work together to quell Palestinian terrorism. Germany and Israel are staunch allies. At the time of both the Munich Olympics and the Yom Kippur War, Israel maintained friendly relations with the Shah of Iran. Today, Iran’s Islamic theocracy, its nuclear ambitions, and its proxies in Lebanon, Syria and Gaza are cause for Israel’s concern.
Middle East conflict remains, albeit with different players and a remade regional map.
Some things may never change. At the 2016 Olympics in Brazil, judoka Or Sasson (also competing in Tokyo), won the bronze medal. Along the way he defeated an Egyptian judoka who refused to shake his hand. A female Saudi judoka forfeited a match to avoid having to compete against an Israeli woman.
The 2021 Olympics in Tokyo (yes, a year late due to the pandemic) will hold its opening ceremonies this week. Israel will march in the parade of nations. But this year it has seven athletes, and a baseball team, with a very good chance of winning medals, even the gold (especially in men’s judoka, women’s rhythmic gymnastics, women’s surfing, and an Ethiopian Jew in the marathon). Israel’s baseball team qualified as one of the six to compete for gold.
Still a speck of a country. All that European chutzpah and Sephardic resourcefulness. Israel moves fast, where and when it counts. Stay tuned: You might hear “Hatikvah” played in Tokyo.
Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro College, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. For his writings in the Jewish Journal, he won the American Jewish Press Association’s Louis Rapaport Award for Excellence in Commentary.
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks
Israel and the Internet Wars – A Professional Social Media Review
The Invisible Student: A Tale of Homelessness at UCLA and USC
What Ever Happened to the LA Times?
Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?
You’re Not a Bad Jewish Mom If Your Kid Wants Santa Claus to Come to Your House
No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles
What I Have is For You – A poem for Parsha Terumah
A Bisl Torah — Feeling Motivated?
A Moment in Time: “Both/ And”
Improvise As Did the Covenant Code
In His New Book, Josh Shapiro Reveals a Secret of Possible Sabotage
Clashing American Traditions
A Nation on the Court: Deni Avdija Sparks Pride Across Israel at NBA All-Star Game
Not only Israelis visiting from Israel arrived at the Intuit Dome — many local Israelis were there as well.
Print Issue: His Last Stop | February 20, 2026
The late conservative activist Charlie Kirk pens a love letter to the Jewish Sabbath, and invites the world to reclaim its humanity.
Sports and Faith Unite at Sinai Temple Summit
As the NBA All-Star Game brought the world’s top basketball players to Los Angeles, Sinai Temple and Fabric, a direct-to-fan mixed-media platform, teamed up to host a summit exploring how sports and faith can bridge divides, combat extremism and fight hate.
A Bridge-Building Dinner for College Students
The feel-good gathering, held at the Renaissance Hotel near LAX Airport, drew approximately 130 students.
A Purim Bread to Gladden the Heart
For Purim, the Jewish communities of North Africa bake a special Purim bread roll called Ojos de Haman (eyes of Haman), with a whole egg cradled in the bread, with two strips of dough on top forming an X.
Elaine Hall: Jewish Disability Awareness and Inclusion Month, “A Different Spirit” and Papaya Boats
Taste Buds with Deb – Episode 143
Table for Five: Terumah
A Home For God
Sparking the Soul of Sacred Practice
Wildes’ book presents, in a warm and accessible manner, the core beliefs and practices of Judaism.
Charlie Kirk’s Last Stop: Shabbat
The late conservative activist pens a love letter to the Jewish Sabbath, and invites the world to reclaim its humanity.
Rosner’s Domain | Undecided – on Priorities Too
Israel’s 2026 election will not be decided by the shouting matches on television or the megaphones at protests. It will be decided by a quieter group, one large enough to swing a dozen seats yet ideologically flexible enough to be wooed by competing camps.
Amid Security Concerns, Bari Weiss’ UCLA Daniel Pearl Memorial Lecture Has Been Canceled
A UCLA spokesperson told the Journal that Weiss’ team “withdrew” from the event.
Political Change Alone Does Not Produce Freedom
A future Iran will not be judged by the promises it makes, but by whether families like mine could remain without fear, without bribery, and without contingency determining survival.
Answering the Wicked Child: Three Generations, One Holocaust Story
From the Yellow Star to the Blue Square: The Schindler’s List Effect and the Crisis of Jewish Sovereignty
The belief that we will be loved because of our weakness or protected because of our victimhood is not only ineffective; it is inaccurate. Moreover, it is not Jewish.
Why the Civil War at Human Rights Watch Over Israel Matters
HRW is in the middle of a very intense and public civil war that has exposed deep fissures and threatens to cripple the institution. The disappearance or significant weakening of this NGO would be a major loss for anti-Israel, antizionist, and antisemitic forces.
How Jewish Education Can Make Things Better
Emphasizing land, language and culture offers one framework for building thick Jewish identity.
The 3% Strategy: How Institutions Use Fringe Jewish Voices to Dismantle Jewish Safety
The IHRA definition became a real hurdle for anti-Israel activism. The 3% strategy dismantles it with plausible deniability.
“Door to Door”: Bridging Generations Through Jewish Intergenerational Housing
A Community Solution for Seniors and Young Adults Facing Housing Challenges
The Bret Stephens Speech
His speech was courageous, astute and necessary. It was also wrong.
It’s Time to Add Humor to Our Fight Against Jew-Haters
Comics have swagger. When they use humor to speak the truth, it gets through for the simple reason that people love to laugh.
More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.