Munich memories
Filed under: A New Reality, General, History and Culture, Life, News, Politics, Sports, War
When I saw a news report Tuesday that Munich was one of the three cities that had officially entered a bid to host the 2018 Winter Olympics, I could hardly believe my eyes.
What was behind the thinking of the city officials behind the campaign? ‘Well, we screwed up in ’72, but maybe we can do better next time if we get another chance.’
The families of the 11 Israelis killed in the Palestinian terrorist attack on the Olympic Village in 1972 may not be thrilled with the possibility that Munich will beat out Annecy, France, and Pyeongchang, South Korea for the privilege of hosting the 2018 winter games and they have good reason.
Anke Spitzer, widow of one of the victims, Israel fencing coach Andre Spitzer, has been spearheading a campaign for years to convince the International Olympic Committee to hold a memorial service during the opening ceremony of the Olympic games. The IOC has repeatedly denied the requests, saying they don’t want to mix politics and sport or offend the participants from Arab and Muslim states.
Spitzker related to The Jerusalem Post how she attended the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where she met with the German delegation at their complex. She said that she was told by delegates that “the people of Munich feel short-changed, that they lost an Olympics because of what happened [in 1972]. We told them we lost a little more than this.”
Spitzker and other widows from the attack like Ilana Romano, the 64- year-old widow of weightlifter Yosef Romano, can live with another Munich Olympics if the memorial ceremony is included. Romano said the that the event being held in Munich again “will remind people of the victims and of what happened.”
“I absolutely believe that Munich is a very painful place for us, for families to walk there again and see the Olympics there again it will reopen old wounds. But, for the memory of the victims, this is the place where the ceremony must be held and someone with the courage to make it happen must step forward and do so.”
So, if the International Olympic Committee is brazen enough to choose Munich as the 2018 site, let them at least be compassionate enough to also vote to inaugurate the memorial ceremony for the Israeli victims of 1972. It’s the least they can do.
Angels, demons and Israelis
Filed under: General, Movies, Pop Culture, Profiles

Ayelet Zurer - the Julia Roberts of Israel.
And now Liraz Charhi has been cast in Fair Game, director Doug Liman’s drama about outed CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson. Naomi Watts already has been cast as Plame. Sean Penn plays her husband, ambassador Joseph Wilson.
But she’ll have a hard time achieving the success that Zurer has managed since being cast as Eric Bana’s husband in Steven Spielberg’s Munich four years ago. The Los Angeles Time recently published a flattering profile of Zurer, calling her the Julia Roberts of Israel.
According to director Ron Howard, Zurer beat out eight other actresses who also had screen-tested with Hanks for the role of truth-seeking Italian physicist Vittoria Vetra.
“There’s something very unself-conscious and honest and earthy about Ayelet,” says Howard, “and yet she has the capacity to deal with the scientific jargon in a way that felt honest and she felt comfortable with it.”
The story goes on to describe her upbringing in Israel as the child of a Holocaust survivor.
Despite her lightheartedness, Zurer seems to possess a kind of subtle stoic quality, which might be genetic or simply the product of growing up in the Middle East. She is a child of the Holocaust — her mother, then just a 5-year- old in Czechoslovakia, lived through the war by hiding out in a convent, and later reunited with her family for only a year in the forest. In the ’50s, she immigrated to Israel, and ultimately married Zurer’s father, a government worker who painted on the side.
There were oil paints in Zurer’s Tel Aviv home, and “everybody expected me to do something with painting,” but then genes overtook her, she explains. “What happened was I became this pretty girl from a non-pretty girl and was dragged into doing all kinds of things on stage. I found it to be really fun, but never thought I’d pursue it, because I was too shy.”
She did her required army stint – singing for the troops as part of a special arts division. She admits that whenever she’s asked about her army experience, “I always get this redness in my skin and face. I didn’t do anything. I didn’t carry a gun, thank you very much.”
After her army service, Zurer went on to study acting in New York before ultimately returning to Israel, where she won the 2003 Israeli Oscar equivalent for her performance as a woman who lost her husband in a terrorist attack in the dramedy Nina’s Tragedies and later starred in the TV series “B’Tipul,” the forerunner of HBO’s “In Treatment.”
Then Hollywood beckoned, and a star was born. Let’s see if Liraz Charhi can repeat the feat.











