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Moshe Weinberg
View on WikipediaMoshe Weinberg (Hebrew: משה ויינברג sometimes Weinberger; 19 September 1939 – 5 September 1972) was an Israeli wrestler who was the coach of the national team, as well as the coach of Hapoel Tel Aviv.
Key Information
He began his career in Hapoel Haifa. He was the Israeli youth champion in wrestling. He was also the adult wrestling middleweight champion for eight years. At the 1965 Maccabiah Games, he won a gold medal in Greco-Roman wrestling.[1]
He later became a certified coach at the Wingate Institute, and served in that role for five years.[1]
In his capacity as a national wrestling coach, he was sent to the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. He was among 11 Israeli team members who were killed by Palestinian terrorists in what is known as "the Munich massacre".
Death
[edit]In the early morning hours of 5 September 1972, eight members of Black September entered the Olympic Village, Munich. They broke into apartment 1 at Connollystraße 31, which housed five coaches and two referees of the Israeli Olympic team. As the terrorists broke into the apartment, Weinberg was confronted by the group's leader, Luttif Afif, whose own mother was Jewish and whose father was a wealthy Arab-Christian businessman from Nazareth,[2] in a nearby bedroom. Weinberg picked up a nearby fruit knife and was shot through his cheek after slashing Afif, slicing his left breast pocket open but not reaching through to the flesh.[3]
The wounded Weinberg was ordered by the terrorists at gunpoint to show them where the Israelis were. Weinberg led the terrorists past Apartment 2, which housed the fencers, shooters and track athletes, and instead took them to Apartment 3, which housed Israel's weightlifters and wrestlers.[4]
However, taken by surprise, the six athletes of Apartment 3 were captured by the terrorists. While the hostages were being marched back to the officials' apartment, Weinberg once again attacked the intruders, knocking one of them, Mohammed Safady, unconscious and allowing one of his wrestlers, Gad Tsobari, to escape via an underground parking garage.[5] The terrorists fatally shot Weinberg, then threw his body into the street. In moving the hostages to the coaches' apartment, the terrorists killed weightlifter Yossef Romano after he attempted to resist the terrorists. The nine remaining hostages were also subsequently killed in what became known as the Munich massacre. Atif and four other terrorists were killed by German snipers on 6 September.[2]
Weinberg’s cousin, Edward Carmel Eliash — who was, at the time of the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Mayor of Tirat Carmel (Hebrew: טִירַת כַּרְמֶל), or Tirat HaCarmel, a city in the Haifa District in Israel — suffered a heart attack at the public memorial ceremony the following day at the Olympics.
Weinberg's actor son, Guri Weinberg, portrayed his father in the 2005 movie Munich.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Sketches of Victims". The New York Times.
- ^ a b David Clay Large (2012). Munich 1972: Tragedy, Terror, and Triumph at the Olympic Games. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742567399.
- ^ Reeve, Simon (2000). One day in September: the full story of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre and the Israeli revenge operation "Wrath of God" (1st U.S. ed.). New York: Arcade. p. 5. ISBN 1559705477.
- ^ Reeve, Simon (2000). One day in September: the full story of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre and the Israeli revenge operation "Wrath of God" (1st U.S. ed.). New York: Arcade. p. 6. ISBN 1559705477.
- ^ Reeve, Simon (2000). One day in September : the full story of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre and the Israeli revenge operation "Wrath of God" (1st U.S. ed.). New York: Arcade. p. 8. ISBN 1559705477.
- ^ Weinberg, Guri. "Biography". IMDB. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
Moshe Weinberg
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Birth and Family Background
Moshe Weinberg was born Moshe Weinberger on September 19, 1939, in Haifa, then part of Mandatory Palestine under British administration.[5][6] His parents, Elieser Ladislaus Weinberger and Henrietta (Henya) Weinberger, were Jewish immigrants whose family origins traced to Austria; they had fled the Nazi regime prior to his birth.[6][7] Weinberg, affectionately known as Muni or Moni, was raised primarily by his grandparents in Haifa, a coastal city that served as a center for Jewish settlement and Zionist efforts amid escalating Arab-Jewish tensions in the late Mandate period.[7][8] Details on Weinberg's early family life remain sparse in public records, reflecting the private nature of such information for figures primarily known through later events. He later married Mimi Weinberg, with whom he had a son, Guri Weinberg, born in August 1972.[9][10] Guri would grow up to become an actor, notably portraying his father in the 2005 film Munich.[9] His upbringing occurred against the backdrop of Israel's establishment in 1948 and waves of post-Holocaust Jewish immigration, which bolstered Haifa's diverse Jewish communities originating from Europe and elsewhere.[5][7]Introduction to Wrestling
Moshe Weinberg, born on September 19, 1939, in Haifa, initiated his athletic pursuits in wrestling during his youth at the Hapoel Haifa club, a prominent sports organization in the newly independent State of Israel.[5][1] Following Israel's establishment in 1948, when Weinberg was nine years old, the nation prioritized developing its sports programs to cultivate physical resilience among its population, with clubs like Hapoel Haifa serving as key hubs for youth training in disciplines such as wrestling.[1] Weinberg emerged as a standout local figure in these early environments, honing foundational skills in technique and endurance through consistent club involvement. His formative experiences emphasized rigorous discipline and the cultivation of physical strength, aligning with broader cultural pushes in Israeli society to promote athleticism as a means of empowerment after centuries of diaspora vulnerability and the recent Holocaust's devastation.[11] Personal determination propelled Weinberg from casual youth participation to a deeper commitment, as he immersed himself in daily training regimens that built his foundational prowess in the sport, setting the stage for sustained involvement without yet venturing into formal competitions.[1] This period marked the inception of his lifelong dedication to wrestling, driven by an intrinsic motivation to excel amid the club's supportive yet demanding atmosphere.Athletic Career
National Championships
Weinberg established early dominance in Israeli wrestling by becoming the national youth champion.[1][11] As an adult competitor in the middleweight division, he secured the Greco-Roman national championship for eight consecutive years, reflecting sustained technical proficiency and physical conditioning in a discipline emphasizing upper-body holds and throws.[11][12] He primarily represented Hapoel Haifa, a club club pivotal in Israel's post-independence sports development, where his victories enhanced the organization's reputation in domestic competitions during the 1950s and 1960s.[13][1]International Competitions
Weinberg represented Israel in international Greco-Roman wrestling competitions during the 1960s, primarily in the middleweight division.[1] His most notable achievement came at the 1965 Maccabiah Games, where he secured the gold medal.[11][14] These games, contested among Jewish athletes from around the world, provided a key platform for Israeli competitors amid limited access to broader global events due to regional political tensions and selective participation by other nations.[1] While Weinberg's international record lacked Olympic qualification or medals from major world championships, his Maccabiah success underscored his technical proficiency in Greco-Roman style, characterized by upper-body throws and holds without leg attacks.[11] Specific bout details from the 1965 event remain sparsely documented, but the victory aligned with his sustained national dominance, affirming his competitive edge against diaspora opponents.[14] Israeli wrestlers of the era, including Weinberg, often navigated logistical hurdles such as travel restrictions and security risks, which constrained opportunities beyond regional or affinity-based meets.[1]Coaching Career
Roles and Teams
After retiring from competitive wrestling, Weinberg transitioned to coaching, becoming a certified instructor at the Wingate Institute in 1966, where he served as the national wrestling team coach.[5][14] In this role, he focused on developing Israel's Greco-Roman wrestling programs, leveraging his expertise as a multiple national champion in the discipline to build competitive structures from the ground up.[1][15] Weinberg also took on the head coaching position for the Hapoel Tel Aviv wrestling club, a prominent Israeli sports organization, where he emphasized talent cultivation and program enhancement alongside his national duties.[1][5] This dual affiliation allowed him to integrate club-level training with international preparation, fostering a pipeline for national team contenders in Greco-Roman styles.[16][14] Recognizing his proven track record in elevating Israeli wrestling standards, Weinberg was selected as the national team's coach for the 1972 Summer Olympics, a role that underscored his authority in high-level Greco-Roman strategy and athlete development.[17][18]Notable Athletes and Contributions
Weinberg served as coach for the Hapoel Tel Aviv wrestling club and the Israeli national wrestling team, where he focused on developing talent from immigrant backgrounds to strengthen the sport domestically.[1] Among his key trainees were Soviet émigrés Mark Slavin and Eliezer Halfin, both of whom joined the national team under his guidance in preparation for international competition. Slavin, who immigrated to Israel in 1971, received accelerated citizenship and specialized training from Weinberg to adapt his Soviet-honed skills to competitive demands.[19] Similarly, Halfin, who arrived in 1969, benefited from Weinberg's direct coaching at facilities like the Wingate Institute, enabling rapid integration into the Israeli wrestling framework.[20][21] Weinberg's approach emphasized intensive investment in these athletes' acclimation, leveraging their prior experience from a wrestling powerhouse like the Soviet Union to deepen Israel's team roster and competitive edge.[1] This targeted development of immigrant wrestlers addressed gaps in native talent pools, contributing to the professionalization of Greco-Roman and freestyle disciplines within Israel during the early 1970s.[22] By prioritizing such recruits, Weinberg helped foster a resilient cadre of competitors, aligning with broader efforts to build physical prowess in a nation emphasizing self-reliance in combat sports.[1] His tenure marked a pivotal expansion of wrestling's infrastructure, transitioning it from sporadic national successes to a more structured Olympic pipeline.[15]1972 Summer Olympics Involvement
Selection as Coach
In early 1972, Moshe Weinberg was selected as the wrestling coach for Israel's delegation to the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, leveraging his established role as national coach and his proven track record in the sport.[1] Weinberg had secured eight national championships in Greco-Roman middleweight wrestling and a gold medal at the 1965 Maccabiah Games, while also coaching the Hapoel Tel Aviv club team.[11] His appointment reflected the Israeli Olympic Committee's emphasis on experienced domestic figures to guide athletes toward international competition, particularly in wrestling, where Israel sought to build competitiveness.[1] Weinberg's selection aligned with Israel's broader commitment to the Munich Games, marking the nation's first full Olympic participation since 1952 and prioritizing athletic engagement as a pathway to global normalization amid regional hostilities. Despite documented threats from Palestinian militant groups and calls for an Arab boycott of the event hosted in West Germany, Israeli officials proceeded, viewing sports diplomacy as essential for asserting presence on the world stage. Weinberg, as a key staff member, contributed to this effort by focusing on wrestlers like Soviet émigrés Eliezer Halfin and Mark Slavin, tailoring regimens at the Wingate Institute to meet Olympic standards through intensive drills and technical scouting.[1][11]Preparation and Travel to Munich
In the months leading up to the 1972 Summer Olympics, Moshe Weinberg, as national wrestling coach, directed rigorous training sessions for the Israeli wrestlers in Israel, emphasizing physical conditioning, technique, and mental resilience to prepare for Greco-Roman and freestyle competitions scheduled later in the Games.[23] These efforts built on Weinberg's prior success in developing athletes through demanding regimens, amid a backdrop of heightened vigilance following terrorist incidents like the May 30, 1972, Lod Airport attack by Palestinian militants that killed 26 people at Israel's main airport. The Israeli Olympic delegation, including Weinberg and his wrestlers, traveled to Munich in August 1972, arriving at the Olympic Village ahead of the opening ceremony on August 26 to allow for acclimation to the European climate and venue facilities.[7] Weinberg supervised initial on-site adjustments, such as light training and team coordination, while expressing concerns over potential threats given Israel's history of targeted attacks by groups like Black September.[4] Despite these warnings from Israeli officials, the West German hosts and International Olympic Committee implemented only basic security measures for the Village—relying on unarmed guards and an ethos of open international harmony—rejecting requests for reinforced protection due to underestimation of risks in the post-World War II reconciliation context.[24] This reflected broader pre-Games optimism, with approximately 120 police assigned to monitor the athlete housing, insufficient for the 10,000 participants.[4]Munich Massacre
Initial Terrorist Intrusion
At approximately 4:30 a.m. on September 5, 1972, eight terrorists affiliated with the Palestinian Black September organization—a Fatah-linked militant group aiming to undermine Israel's legitimacy through high-profile attacks—breached the perimeter of the Munich Olympic Village by scaling a chain-link fence in an unsecured area.[24] [25] The intruders, armed with AK-47 rifles, pistols, and grenades, evaded detection due to minimal security protocols, which relied on about 200 unarmed Croatian watchmen and lacked routine patrols or barriers around athlete housing; West German organizers had deliberately avoided armed forces to project a peaceful, post-Nazi image.[26] [4] This lax setup allowed the group to traverse the village grounds undetected for roughly 20 minutes before reaching their target: the Israeli delegation's apartments in Building 31 on Connollystrasse.[27] The terrorists specifically selected the Israeli contingent, housing wrestlers, weightlifters, and coaches, as a symbolic strike against the Jewish state's participation in the games.[28] Upon arrival, they forced entry into multiple apartments, exploiting unlocked doors and the athletes' late-night return from celebrations; gunfire erupted almost immediately, signaling the onset of the hostage crisis.[24] [25] Black September's ultimatum, communicated shortly after securing initial hostages, demanded the release of 234 Palestinian militants imprisoned by Israel—along with two West German terrorists held domestically—in exchange for safe passage, tying the operation to the Palestine Liberation Organization's broader rejection of Israel's right to exist.[4] [26] German authorities, caught off-guard by the scale of the breach, initially mistook the intrusion for a minor disturbance, delaying any coordinated response as the terrorists consolidated control amid growing chaos in the village.[24]Weinberg's Resistance Efforts
When the Black September terrorists breached Apartment 1 in the Israeli Olympic team's quarters at approximately 4:30 a.m. on September 5, 1972, Moshe Weinberg, sharing the space with wrestlers, was the first team member to confront the intruders.[29] He immediately resisted by throwing himself against the door to barricade it and shouting warnings to awaken and alert his roommates, creating initial disarray among the attackers.[30] This unarmed defense delayed the terrorists' full entry, providing a narrow window for some teammates to react.[31] In the ensuing hand-to-hand struggle, Weinberg overpowered and knocked unconscious one terrorist before engaging another, reportedly with a knife obtained during the melee.[31] He sustained a gunshot wound to the cheek during this resistance but persisted until the terrorists subdued him, forcing the injured coach at gunpoint to identify and lead them to other apartments housing teammates.[32][33] His determined opposition, despite the numerical disadvantage against armed assailants, exemplified direct physical counteraction that survivor recollections and post-event inquiries attribute to enabling brief escapes by athletes like wrestler Gad Tsobari through adjacent rooms or windows before the terrorists consolidated control.[34][35] Weinberg's efforts inflicted harm on at least one attacker, disrupting their initial momentum and buying critical seconds for evasion attempts amid the confusion.[31] Accounts from the scene, corroborated across multiple investigations, highlight how his refusal to submit passively—transitioning from barricading to aggressive engagement—directly countered the terrorists' element of surprise, though it ultimately led to his fatal shooting in the apartment.[4][36]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Circumstances of Death
During the initial assault on the Israeli team's apartment in the Olympic Village on September 5, 1972, Moshe Weinberg, the wrestling coach, physically resisted the eight Black September terrorists who had breached the building around 4:30 a.m. Armed with AK-47 assault rifles and hand grenades, the attackers fired upon Weinberg as he fought back, inflicting a fatal gunshot wound.[35] Weinberg succumbed to the gunshot wound shortly thereafter in the apartment, becoming one of two team members killed in the early stages of the confrontation. His body remained in the apartment following the shooting, later handled by the terrorists amid stalled negotiations with authorities.[37][35]Body Handling and Funeral
The bodies of the Munich massacre victims, including Moshe Weinberg's, were transported to the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Munich for autopsies conducted by Bavarian pathologist Wolfgang Eisenmenger on September 6, 1972.[38] Israeli authorities pressed for expedited procedures to facilitate rapid repatriation, limiting the depth of forensic examinations amid logistical pressures following the crisis.[38] Subsequent scrutiny by victims' families and observers focused on discrepancies in autopsy reports, particularly claims of pre-death torture or mutilation—such as allegations of castration for Weinberg—which Eisenmenger explicitly refuted based on ballistic and injury evidence indicating death by gunshot wounds during resistance.[38] These reports, drawn from declassified German files released decades later, highlighted tensions over the reliability of initial German forensic handling under chaotic post-massacre conditions, though no formal Israeli re-examinations were conducted upon repatriation.[38] Weinberg's remains were flown back to Israel on an El Al aircraft with the other victims and interred on September 8, 1972, at Segula Cemetery in Petah Tikva.[39] His wife, Miriam (Mimi), and newborn son, Guri, were involved in the funeral arrangements, reflecting personal family oversight amid national mourning protocols.[40]Legacy
Heroism Recognition
Weinberg's resistance during the initial terrorist intrusion on September 5, 1972, received explicit acknowledgment in eyewitness accounts and official reports, distinguishing his actions from those of other victims who were unable to mount a defense. As the first Israeli confronted by the Black September gunmen, Weinberg lunged at attacker Afif Ahmed Hamid (known as Issa) with a kitchen knife and attempted to barricade the door, shouting warnings to teammates in adjacent rooms to flee, which enabled wrestler Gad Tsobari and others to escape through a window.[41] This defiance delayed the terrorists momentarily and inflicted physical struggle, though Weinberg sustained fatal gunshot wounds to the chest and head in the process.[35] [4] Israeli survivor testimonies, including those from delegation members, have consistently praised Weinberg's instinctive combativeness as a model of self-defense under existential threat, countering portrayals in some international accounts that minimized victim agency by depicting the athletes uniformly as passive hostages. For instance, reports from the scene emphasized how his physical confrontation—rooted in his background as an eight-time national middleweight wrestling champion—forced the attackers to expend ammunition and effort early, potentially disrupting their operational tempo.[35] [4] These elements were highlighted in post-event analyses by Israeli officials, which critiqued security lapses but commended individual acts of resistance like Weinberg's as exemplars of resolve against terror.[41] Posthumously, national and international sports bodies recognized Weinberg's valor through targeted honors tied to wrestling governance. On September 7, 1972, during the resumption of Olympic wrestling competitions, the International Amateur Wrestling Federation announced special awards honoring Weinberg alongside team captain Yosef Gutfreund, framing their sacrifices as integral to the sport's ethos of tenacity. In Israel, his legacy as a defender was enshrined in military and athletic commemorations, with state honors listing him among fallen heroes whose proactive engagement embodied realistic countermeasures to armed assault, rather than submission.[42] Such distinctions underscore data from 1972 incident reconstructions, which documented Weinberg's wounds on attackers through forensic and ballistic evidence, affirming active victim opposition over narratives of helplessness.[35][4]Memorials and Cultural Impact
A memorial plaque commemorating the victims of the Munich massacre, including Moshe Weinberg, is located at the former site of the Israeli athletes' quarters in the Munich Olympic Village.[43] Annual commemorations of the event occur in Israel and Germany, with the 50th anniversary in 2022 featuring official ceremonies attended by Israeli President Isaac Herzog, who described the attack as an act of Palestinian terrorism by the Black September group without equivocation.[44] These events emphasized factual remembrance of the assault's terrorist origins, rejecting narratives that dilute responsibility.[45] The massacre directly prompted Israel to overhaul security protocols for its sports delegations, instituting mandatory armed protection details, pre-event threat assessments, and fortified accommodations for athletes competing abroad, measures that persist and have prevented similar breaches.[4] This shift represented a causal response to the vulnerability exposed in 1972, influencing global Olympic security paradigms by highlighting the need for specialized counterterrorism units.[46] Weinberg's son, Guri Weinberg, has sustained family advocacy through public statements and media appearances, insisting on depictions of the incident as deliberate Palestinian terrorism rather than ambiguous violence, and critiquing institutions like the International Olympic Committee for inadequate perpetual recognition.[9] [47] His efforts underscore ongoing cultural insistence on unsoftened historical truth amid attempts to reframe the event.[48]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MunichMassacrePlaque.jpg
