By: History.com Editors

Munich Massacre

1972 Olympic Games

Russell Mcphedran/The Sydney Morning Herald/Fairfax Media/Getty Images

Published: May 24, 2021

Last Updated: March 02, 2025

In what became known as the Munich Massacre, eight terrorists wearing tracksuits and carrying gym bags filled with grenades and assault rifles, breached the Olympic Village at the Summer Games in Munich before dawn on September 5, 1972. The terrorists, associated with Black September, an extremist faction of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, entered the apartment complex where Israeli athletes were staying. Once inside, they murdered two members of the Israeli team and took nine others hostage. Audiences around the world then watched in horror as the international nightmare unfolded on live TV.

The terrorists demanded the release of 234 Arab prisoners from Israeli jails, as well as two German terrorists held in West German custody. When authorities attempted to rescue the hostages after a 23-hour standoff, all the hostages, one West German police officer and five Black September members were killed.

More than 900 million viewers watched coverage of the terrorist attack on TV, including the now iconic sight of a black ski mask-clad terrorist on the balcony. It was the first time an act of terror was broadcast live and took place during a major global sporting event.

Lax Security During Post-Nazi Olympic Games

Hosting its first Olympics in Germany since Adolf Hitler’s Nazi propaganda and racism-laden 1936 Summer Games in Berlin, the West German government had been looking to highlight its democracy and downplay any military presence. Hailing the event as “the Games of Peace and Joy,” and “the Cheerful Games,” West Germany eschewed uniformed soldiers and police for unarmed guards.

Less than 30 years after the end of World War II, when approximately 6 million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust, Israel entered the Munich Olympics with its biggest-ever team of officials and athletes. According to the book One Day in September by Simon Reeve, "several of them (were) older Eastern Europeans still bearing physical and mental scars from Nazi concentration camps."

Israeli officials had reportedly voiced concern about the lack of security at the Games and a 1972 New York Times report pointed to "glaring" precautionary deficiencies. The way the terrorists were able to take deadly advantage of easy access to the village would change security protocols and preparation for future Olympics.

The Terrorist Attack

Ten days into the Games, on September 5, 1972, under the cloak of darkness, the terrorists stormed the Israeli team's quarters at 4:30 a.m., having been helped over a wire fence by athletes sneaking in after a night out who mistook them for fellow Olympians.

Upon breaching the Israeli dorm, wrestling coach Moshe Weinberg and weightlifter Yossef Romano were killed almost immediately. Horrifyingly, Romano, according to the Associated Press, was castrated and Weinberg’s body was thrown to the street. Some escaped, but nine Israelis were quickly taken hostage, including weightlifters David Berger, who was born in America, and Ze’ev Friedman, wrestlers Eliezer Halfin and Mark Slavin, track and field coach Amitzur Shapira, sharpshooting coach Kehat Shorr, fencer Andre Spitzer, weightlifting judge Yakov Springer and wrestling referee Yossef Gutfreund.

A 9 a.m. deadline was set for the terrorists’ political prisoner release demands—not meeting it, they said, would result in one hostage being executed every hour.

Negotiations and Demands

With no counter-terror unit in place, the West Germans took control of the negotiations, with Munich's police chief as well as Libyan and Tunisian ambassadors to Germany, attempting to deal with the kidnappers. According to the Guardian, the terrorists rejected the offer of "an unlimited amount of money" for the release of the hostages, but did extend their deadline multiple times. At least one attempt at a rescue in the athletes’ dorm was botched when the terrorists were able to view officers approaching on TV—their electricity hadn’t been cut off.

Israel's immediate response was that there would be no negotiations. "If we should give in, then no Israeli anywhere in the world can feel that his life is safe," Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said at the time.

With negotiations failing, the members of Black September demanded transport to Cairo and, with the hostages, were moved via two helicopters to Fürstenfeldbruck air base, about 15 miles away, where a jet was waiting. In a rescue attempt-turned bloodbath, German snipers, with no sharpshooting experience, inadequate gear, bad intelligence and no means of communication with each other, opened fire on the kidnappers. The terrorists returned fire, killing Anton Fliegerbauer, a German policeman positioned in a control tower. All nine hostages, bound in the helicopters, were killed by gunfire and a grenade.

Black September leader Luttif Afif and four other terrorists were also left dead, while three were captured alive.

Reaction and Response

Following the attack, the Games were suspended for 34 hours, with a memorial service held September 6 in Olympic Stadium that was attended by 3,000 athletes and 80,000 spectators. The rest of the Israeli team left Munich, as did Mark Spitz, the Jewish American swimmer who had already won seven gold medals at the Games, and the Egyptian, Philippine and Algerian teams, among others.

A month later, the three captured terrorists were released in a hostage exchange after the hijacking of Lufthansa Flight 615 and received a “hero’s welcome” upon arrival in Libya, according to Reuters.

Meir and Israel, meanwhile, responded with Operation Wrath of God, a covert Mossad mission to kill the masterminds behind the Munich massacre. Several suspects were assassinated in the coming months, but the mission was suspended when an innocent man was mistakenly killed in Norway in 1973. The target of that shooting, Black September Chief of Operations Ali Hassan Salameh, was assassinated by car bomb in 1979 in the operation’s final mission.

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

Portraits of 11 Israeli athletes and coaches slain in West Germany at the 1972 Olympic Games. They are (top left to right): Yosef Gutfreund, 40; Moshe Weinberg, 33: Yoseph Romano, 32; David Berger, 28; Mark Slavin, 18; Yaacov Springer, 52; (bottom left to right): Ze’ev Friedman, 28; Amitsur Shapira, 40; Eliezer Halfin, 24; Kehat Schorr, 53; Andre Spitzer, 27.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

A member of the International Olympic Committee (bottom right) speaks with a masked Palestine Liberation Organization terrorist who invaded the Olympic Village on September 5, 1972 during the Summer Olympics in Munich. The terrorists killed two members of the Israeli Olympic team and then took nine hostage. Eventually, all 11 Israeli Olympic members were killed.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

Armed police drop into position on a terrace directly above the apartments where members of the Israeli Olympic team were being held hostage by Arab “Black September” extremists. The extremists raided the Israeli quarters in the early morning hours and shot and killed a wrestling coach as they forced their way in.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

Protesters hold the banner ‘Stop the Game’ as Israeli athletes were held hostage on September 5, 1972 in Munich, West Germany.

The Asahi Shimbun/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

A bus carrying terrorist group Black September and hostages sits at the entrance underneath the Israeli athletes’ residence building before heading to the Fuerstenfeldbruck Air Base during the Munich Olympic Games on September 5, 1972 in Munich, West Germany.

The Asahi Shimbun/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

The remains of the helicopter used by Arab guerillas to escape from the Olympic village with 11 Israeli hostages. The helicopter was destroyed in a gun battle with German police which resulted in five terrorists and all 11 athletes being killed.

Rolls Press/Popperfoto/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

The remains of the victims of the 1972 attack seen laid out in a Munich synagog. An Israeli flag covers each of the coffins.

DPA/Picture Alliance/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

The mother of an Israeli athlete slain at the 1972 Summer Olympic Games grieves for her son at his funeral.

David Rubinger/Corbis/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

The Olympic flag flying at half mast as crowds of spectators and athletes sit and stand inside the Olympic Stadium during the memorial ceremony for the Israeli athletes and team members killed by the Black September Palestinian terrorist group, September 6, 1972.

Rolls Press/Popperfoto/Getty Images

Munich Massacre 1972 - Photo Gallery

Mourners crowding around members of the Israel Defense Forces seated in the rear of military trucks, each containing a flower-covered coffin of one of the 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team, killed in the Munich massacre at the 1972 Summer Olympics, as they take part in a repatriation ceremony at an airport in Israel in September 1972.

Rolls Press/Popperfoto/Getty Images

Sources

“Israeli team’s massacre overshadows sports at 1972 Olympics,” by Aron Heller, Associated Press, August 7, 2020.

"The terrorist outrage in Munich in 1972," by Simon Burnton, The Guardian, May 2, 2012.

FACTBOX: “The Munich Olympics killings and their aftermath,” by Reuters Staff, Reuters, March 7, 2012.

One Day in September: The Full Story of the 1972 Munich Olympics Massacre and the Israeli Revenge Operation 'Wrath of God,' by Simon Reeve, Simon & Schuster, 2018.

“Tragedy in Munich,” National Park Service

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Citation Information

Article title
Munich Massacre
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 21, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 02, 2025
Original Published Date
May 24, 2021

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