Purely Commentary 36-Year-Old Tragedy Echoes at Olympics A 36-year-old tragedy will have its echoes in Munich when the 1972 Olympic summer games take place there in Augusl The Hitler era already is being recalled in relation in the making for the worldwide sports tournaments. 'he plans now Will Jews participate, and what will be the reaction to another Olympics, recalling the games in Berlin. in 1936, when Hitler showed his venom and Jews and Negroes were vilified? German spokesmen have an opinion. They say, as one diplomat has already told The Jewish News, that the present is not the Ger- mans of the past, that the youth reject every aspect of the brutalities that were enacted in the lifetime of their parents. They point with pride to the announcement that the outstanding hero of the 1936 Munich Olympics, the Negro Jesse Owens. will he at the games in August as a guest and as one who has said that the Germans treated turn well, in spite of Hitler's abuso. The Germans are elated because Israel has announced the par- ticipation of 15 of its athletes in the August Olympics in Munich: that Israel's national soccer and basketball teams will qualify for preliminary tournaments in which they are already participating: and that the Israel Olympic Committee is planning for Olympics com- petitions by Israelis in swimming, weight-lifting, shooting, yachting, wrestling and fencing. Also—German spokesmen ridicule as sheer nonsense the plans to extreme rightists, by neo-Nazis, to organize "alternative Olym- pl. names' to prove to the world the strength of right-wing elements Germany. The statements by the neo-Nazi Action Resistance, in their official organ Mut—Courage—is branded as an exaggeration, as milt of the boasting by elements who have no status. who have lost erountl. who haze been relegated to a defeated political position Ill Germany. Pot there are other factors: there are the memories of the past. the recollection of what had taken place under the direction of Hitler in 19;16, there are the athletes who were humiliated 36 years ago. I' .sktll Cohen, a leader in Sports for Israel activities, a basketball star, a noted sports writer (our JTA sports expert). takes a firm stand on the subject: he won't join the "forgive and forget" school, he won't go to Germany for the Olympics, he recalls the disappearance ef has grandmother's family, who resided in Frankfurt, under Hitler. .n•+ on the idea of mingling with Germans his own age. ''wondering ,hat they did during the holocaust . ." Cohen quotes one of Amer. ..-a's leading sports writers, Jerry Izenberg, telling him he won't set '..••tit in Germany to cover the Olympics. Ttw ro•e of the Amateur Athletic Union now is recalled. Avery :• arc! a group of misled Americans fought fur U.S. participa- the 1936 games. The courageous Judge Jeremiah Mahoney o. n leader of the opposition Haskell Cohen recalled the experi- et his article m which he defined his present attitude. lie told :attended the Hapoeliada- the 11g.poel Sports Games in t May. as g representative of the Jewish Welfare Board, to. ••ettao with other JWIt delegates, Nat Holman, president of the U. S !■ ;•• ∎ rt• for Israel Committee. and Harold Zimman, chairman of the IWI: pht al education committee. In relation to the emerging cm- ear,- sc:ents over the 1972 Olympics, Cohen's story of the Israel ore. at..1 a confrontation with a German is worth relating. Cohen !-• "tt•I 11:11 ,, e:lada took place , :ue Winga:e School of Ph: • ,sal Education, and the occa- sion was to honor the M•rnOry of Jeremiah Mahoney the Isde and c. norles Ornstein, who were Waders anal in that wow ity fought Mo- il against per- we the 1936 I6jutpic Games take plwe in Berlin After a drawg zoo Little. the Ma- .oein faatton lost nut to tt.,• .1sers Brundage led :troop by ,ate g on, .o r :ow; e. :tml debt r ,,iit.d tu a ,nun.ata IierLr Jesse athletes in track and •.1,•4 gel I 7ht , groop of Americans who . ac ne to Israel in May, inc hiding tt:a committee, wives and friends. bused to the Wingate School nticre e we were ushered to the de- sniot spot for the Mahoney- , o- ii.teitt tree planting ceremony . ' , mad:lc:Gm of the dignitaries • , ant 1m1:10, at.d. to my dismay. reps- . sentato.- from Germany, corneltus Von Horora was -,,me of there in d,he!It'f %St, n the As a, kauW11• ■1■ 2,CCI, but Zia anty tea: tiroi at the precise wor•-nt. wag !,1 - 11 to illy parnon and long tone buddy, Wen- ,WE z:ntd_h. a black televa-,on news reporter and sport colomntst for the Chicago American a Today , , an mutter. "I wonder %Ber ge he was when they were shipping our Jewish people to the furnaces 2 — Friday, May 5, 1972 and crematoriums " Perhaps a nasty remark, but a thought that just had to he expressed and, undoubtedly. one that will be re- peated frequently. by Jews attend- ing the Munich contests, watching own of their generation hosting the proceedings. 1 will say this, the German, ill at ease. tried to appear as unob- trusive as possible but didn't quite make it come off Ile was embar- ra,wil When it came time to start the actual planting of the trees, an of WIn - t.at• Pitroached and asked me to shov•l the debris and The Olympics' historical background is now a matter of Wide discussion, regardless of the embarrassments that may be cr ted for Germany and the Germans. The current issue of the American Jewish Historical Quar erly published by the American Jewish Historical Society carried a 32- page article. "The American Controversy Over the Olympic Games." by Dr. Moshe Gottlieb, professor of history at Beit Berl College in Tsofit, Israel, and Tel Aviv University, who formerly taught Hebrew and Jewish history at Queens College of the City University of New York. About a week or two after the publication of Prof. Gottl eb's article, Saturday Review devoted its March 25 issue to "The Sun -10er Olympics—Munich and the German World." and among the articles on the subject was William L. Shirer's 'From Jesse Owens to the Summer of "72." Both important articles drew' upon historical experiences to point to the terror that dominated the scene in Germany and to the sub- mission to Nazi pressures by Americans at a time when even some gesture of rebuke to the emerging Ilitlerite terror would have been an act of resistance to tyranny and might have averted genocide. Shirer's recollections, as they appeared in Saturday Review, are an indictment of the Americans . who were deluded into believing Nazi propaganda. Shirer's revelations serve as a valuable asset to truth in viewing the past experiences as they relate to the current emot onal reaction to the call to another Olympics in Germany. In part, Stainer stated in recapitulating the events, 36 years ago, as he experienced them: sent to the world at Munich "It Shortly before the fourth winter is to be hoped that the Mirnich Olympics opened in Germany in games will expunge impresSions 1936 I mentioned in a dispatch that have been prejudicial to Ger- from Garmisch-Partenkirchen that many's good name ever since .936. the Nazi authorities were quietly They will certainly give the world removing certain signs, "Jews Un- an introduction to a new and dif- wanted , " "Jews Get Out!" from ferent Germany." the Bavarian resort where the To his own people Daume point- games were to take place, and that Jew-baiting, would be discontinued ed out that the selection of MUnich for this year's games 'meant the until the summer games in Berlin world's gift of renewed trust in ended in mid-August . . . Germany, a trust that is not a Several nations, including the matter of course, but that perhaps United States, had threatened to is not undeserved either." boycott the games because of There will be few, if any re- Hiller's savage treatment of the Jews—he had deprived them of minders of the Nazi time. The their citizenship and civil rights party itself is verboten. The iswa- the year before by official decree. stika symbol that so dominated the The threat had caused much con- sea of flags at the Olympic Stad- cern in Berlin, but now it had ium in 1936, may not be displayed es aporated. Fifty nations were today, even on the cover of a book sending 5.000 athletes to the about Nazi Germany. There is a neo-Nazi movement, to be sure, games. which now and then scores a• vi ocal The day the contents of my dis- success, but it does not amou t to patch were cabled back to Berlin much. Among the older Gerthans all hell broke over my head. The there will be many who 'once Nazi-controlled radio and press proudly wore the swastika bitton hysterically denounced me as "a on their lapels, denoting mentiber- tool of the Jews" and accused me ship in Hitler's party. It is not held of trying to torpedo the Olympic against them in Germany teday. Games. I was threatened with ex- Kurt Kiesinger. the Christian Dem- pulsion. ocrat leader and Willy Bra idt's In the end the Nazi wrath sub- predecessor as chancellor, it an sided. I covered the winter and example. I saw him in the first the summer games, as I had those war years when he was broadcast- eight years before at St. Moritz ing the Nazi line for Ribbentrop's and Amsterdam, and by the time Foreign Office from the . ame the Olympic flame high above studios I worked in as a CBS cor- the stadium in Berlin was ex- respondent. He always wore the tinguished on the evening of Aug. familiar party buitori in his 1 pet. 16, 1936, I readily conceded that Muriel" the birthplace of the Hitler and his Nazi thugs had suc- ceeded in making the XI Olympiad Nazi Party and the scene of Hitler's early triumphs, is dominatec, to- the most colorful in history and. what was more important, had day by the Social-Democrats, who used the Olympics to fool the world control the City Council and whose into believing that Nazi Germany leader is the 45-year-old bunco- was a peaceful, civilized, and con- master, Dr. Ilans-Jochen Fogel. tended nation. Moreover, the tens In Berlin in 1936, for the of of thousands of visitors and the us who were stationed there and athletes from supposedly hostile who covered the Olympic Ga nes, foreign lands seemed, by their It was the distortions that dis- friendliness and expressions of ad- turbed us most. We knew tha4 the miration, to give their approval Third Reich that Hitler, Goe-ing. to the new Germany. This helped Goebbels and the German (l ym- to strengthen Hitler's hold on his pie Committee put over on the visiting athletes and spectators people. Now 36 years later, Germany was a facade. It was made toilook is again host to the summer Oly rn- peaceful and happy and re' son. ap- plc Games. The XX Olympiad will able. but behind the glitterin he held in Munich. Germany's most pearance, we correspondents iyed beautiful and genial city, from daily with a darker side: a egi- Aug. 26 to Sept. 10. Thousands of named, anti-Semitic, militailistic dirt away so that a photo could he taken of the German liapoeli- ada delegate and myself. I begged off. in discreet fashion, and the picture was taken with others less sensitive than I. After the ceremony my good who is friend, Chaim Glovinsky to Israel what Dan Ferris is to American sports, the doyen, apol. °cited for Von llorora's attend- ance at the affair Chaim felt, as I dial. that his very presence at this simple ceremony was a sort of profanation of what Judge Ma- honey and Charley stood for in 'port. I won t be available for duty in Iunicla this summer. It goes with- out saying that I'll be rooting for an American victory in basketball The t i. Olympic basketball team had .no choice in selecting the venue for the games and will be going es erseas with the blessings of its backers, whether these root- ers du or do not attend the games proper. THE DETROIT JEWISH h IEWS William Shirer, American Jewistii Historical Society Researcher Recall 36-Y ar-Old Battle Against Hitler Terror During Bed n Olympics athletes from 126 countries, 4,000 journalists. and tens of thousands nation, contemptuous of the de -noc- racie , , and preparing fever shly" of visiting spectators from all over for war and conquest. the, world will find it a quite dif- None fell more victim to the ferent Germany- from the one Nazi distortion than the At eri- Hitler ruled. None are more con- cans, the American Olympic om- scious of this than the hosts. who rnittee abeve all. and the thousands al* putting up more than $150.- of athletes and spectators from enit,600 to ensure the success of Berlin we had watched with some the summer games. interest the devious hut sue tess. Willi Daume, president of the ful efforts of the American 011ym- German Olympic Committee and pie Committee to dampen and de- chief organizer of the games, has strot; the movement at hone to . been quite frank in discussing the boycott the Olympics in Germany image he hopes Germany will pre- because of Hitler's barbarous t - eat- - ............... .................... By Philip Slomovitz ment of the Jews and because Jews were excluded from the German Olympic teams. Late in 1933 the AAU had voted overwhelmingly to boycott the Olympic Games in Germany un- less Jewish athletes were permit- ted to participate in them on Ger- man teams. The American Olym- pic Committee had approved. A year later it had a change of heart. It dispatched its president, Avery Brundage, the fanatical champion of amateurism (as he demonstrat- ed again at the recent winter games in Japan), to Germany to se , : . t if the Nazis were sincere in claiming that Jews could make their Olympic teams if qualified. Brundage found that the Nazis were sincere. On his return he recommended American participa- tion in the 1936 games, and the American Olympic Committee ac- cepted his recommendation. Still, the agitation for a boycott continued. Gen. Charles E, Sher- rill, a member of both the Ameri- can and the International Olympic committee, was sent over in Sep- tember 1935 to have another look at the German Olympic situation. While he was touring the Third Reich, Hitler promulgated the in- famous Nuremberg Laws, depriv- ing Jews of their citizenship and other civil rights. Undaunted, the brisk general returned to New York in October and announced: "I went to Germany for the pur- pose of getting at least one Jew on the German Olympic team, and I feel that my job is finished." Actually, Sherrill had got two Jews on the German team, both of whom returned from exile to provide window dressing for the Nazis: Rudi Ball, the star hockey player, who was living in France: and Helene Mayer, a half - Jewish fencer, who had won a gold medal in the 1928 games at Amsterdam and who was studying in Los An- geles. In Berlin We correspond- ents noted that no Jews living in Germany were named. And in the case of Miss Mayer, she Was promptly declared an Aryan by the Nazi authorities. These minor concessions from American Berlin satisfied the Olympic Committee, and on Oct. 23, 1935, The New York Times quoted Frederick W. Ruhien, sec- retary of the American Olympic Committee, for the final words "Germans are not discriminating against Jews in their Olympic try- outs. The Jew's are eliminated be- cause they are not good enough as athletes. Why there are not a dozen Jews in the world of Olym- pic caliber." The troth was quite otherwise Jew's in Germany were - eliminat- ed" because they were not allowed to participate in the pre - Olympic qualifying trials. They had been kicked out of all the sporting clubs and were not even allowed to practice or train at any athletic field, private or public, in the en- tire Reich, Helene Mayer herself had been expelled from the Offen- bach Fencing Club. Even the ven- erable and distinguished president of the German Olympic Committee. Dr. Theodor Lewald, the "father of German sports" and active in Olympic circles since 1904. was hooted out by Hitler when it Ka , discovered that. though a practic mg Christian, he had 5 paternal grandmother who was a Jew. Sin- glehandedly he had won the 1936 games for Germany. Now he was replaced by the Reichssportfuhrer. a Nazi hack by the name of lians von Tschammer and Osten.- There was one other prominer: German organizer who was re placed for similar reasons. This was Capt. Wolfgang Fuerstner of The German army, who conceived. built, and organized the magnifi- (Continued on Page 141