Friday, July 27, 2012

REMEMBERING THE 1972 DEAD ISRAELIS.

KING JESUS IS COMING FOR US ANY TIME NOW. THE RAPTURE. BE PREPARED TO GO.

SINCE THE 2012 OLYMPIC COMMITTEE  WOULD NOT HAVE A MINUTE OF SILENCE FOR THE LOST 11 ISRAELIS 40 YEARS AGO AT THE 1972 OLYMPICS.I WILL.I CRYED AS I WATCHED THE 2012 ISRAELIS WALKING WITH THEIR FLAG PROUDLY.THINKING AND I PRAYED THAT GOD WOULD PROTECT THESE ISRAELIS AND SAD THAT THE CTV'S HOST WISHES WOULD NOT COME TRUE THAT A MINUTE OF SILENCE SHOULD HAVE BEEN DONE FOR THE LOST ISRAELIS IN 1972,40 YEARS AFTER THE KILLINGS.EVEN THE CTV HOST BRIAN WILLIAMS WANTED A MINUTE OF SILENCE.I WISH THEY WOULD HAVE HAD A MINUTE OF SILENCE ALSO.SO LETS ALL REMEMBER THE PRECIOUS ISRAELIS THAT WERE MURDERED BY THE PALESTINIAN TERRORISTS IN 1972.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7zwAeZTNzg&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEy5OOS1eAI&feature=player_embedded

Olympics-Israeli minister says to stand up for Munich dead

By Ori Lewis LONDON, July 27 | Fri Jul 27, 2012 3:53pm EDT

Livnat, Israel's most senior politician at the ceremony, said she would stand for a symbolic minute's silence as International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge speaks during the opening of the Games, Israeli media reported. (Reuters) - Israel's sports minister, Limor Livnat, said she would mark the memory of the 11 Israelis killed by Palestinian gunmen at the 1972 Munich Olympics during a key moment of the London Games opening ceremony on Friday.Senior international figures including U.S. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have called for a tribute to the 11 men who were killed in a standoff in Munich with Palestinian Black September gunmen.Family members of the athletes, coaches and officials who were killed, have tried for four decades to persuade the IOC to organise an official commemoration.Rogge led a surprise tribute in the athletes village in London on Monday but that low-key event failed to satisfy the victims' relatives and Olympic organisers rejected calls to hold a minute's silence during the opening ceremony.At the official send-off for the Israeli delegation in Jerusalem earlier this month, Livnat criticised compatriot and IOC member Alex Gilady for failing to support a call to commemorate the 11 men.She said Gilady had told her that he would not support a move that could jeopardise the unity of the Olympic movement and "he would not give (Israel's) enemies an excuse to boycott the Olympic Games".Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who met the Olympic delegation later, said the events of Munich had damaged the Olympic ethos."(Gilady is) the only Israeli in the IOC, the one who should be at the forefront of the Israeli struggle to commemorate the 11 at the opening ceremony, the Israeli whom the whole of Israeli society expects to represent the bereaved families that asks that its sons be recognised," Livnat said at the time."I think that after 40 years, the time has come to stand for a moment of silence ... this is our demand of the IOC," Netanyahu added.The IOC told Reuters that Rogge was expected to attend a commemorative event organised by the Israeli Olympic Committee during the second week of the Games, on Aug. 6 (Editing by Alison Williams)

Minute’s silence for Israelis killed at 1972 Munich Olympics Special


Richard
By Richard Milnes
Jul 27, 2012 - 14 hours ago in Sports
Sydney - Jewish leaders observe a minute’s silence at 11am to remember the eleven Israeli athletes and coaches killed in Munich on 5 September 1972.The one minute’s silence was held at Benefactors Hall, Darlinghurst in Sydney. Vic Alhadeff, CEO of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies, spoke in some detail about the Munich massacre and how the event unfolded. He spoke about the campaign to call for a minute’s silence at the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympic Games. He deplored the consistent refusal of International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge to heed these calls and his decision to hold a low-key memorial ceremony away from the public eye. Vic Alhadeff then read out the names of those who had been killed, before those present, numbering just fewer than fifty held a minute’s silence. More images of the event can be seen here. London 2012 Olympics The Telegraph reports that British Prime Minister, David Cameron, has refused to back calls for a minutes silence to remember the eleven Israelis murdered by Palestinian group Black September at the Munich Olympic Games, forty years ago. He considered planned memorial events to be the proper way to remember what had happened. Ankie Spinker and Illana Romano, whose husbands were amongst those killed in the attack handed a petition to IOC President Jacques Rogge, on 24 July, containing more than 105,000 signatures in support of a minute’s silence.

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