One Day in September: The Story of the 1972 Munich Olympics Massacre

One Day in September: The Story of the 1972 Munich Olympics Massacre

by SimonReeve (Author)

Synopsis

In the early hours of 5 September 1972 the perimeter fence surrounding the Olympic Village in Munich was scaled by terrorists. Their target was the temporary home of the Israeli Olympic team, and within 24 hours seventeen men were dead: eleven Israelis, five terrorists and a German policeman.The attack by Black September, an ultra-violent faction of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, was seen on television by more than 900 million viewers. The world watched as Jews suffered again on German soil. Yet despite the immediate attention given to the disaster crucial questions went unanswered. Why did so many die? Any why have the German officials covered up details of the massacre?Based largely on exhaustive investigations for the film One Day in September, this book is the definitive account of the tragedy. With the help of previously secret documents, photographs and dozens of interviews, it reconstructs the tension of the day - and exposes the full extent of the Israeli 'Wrath of God' revenge mission, which over the next twenty years saw Israeli agents systematically murder their was across Europe and the Middle East.One Day in September is the most compelling account yet written of events in Munich, of the devastating impact the attack had on the relatives of terrorists and athletes alike - and of the long shadow the massacre still casts over the modern world.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 378
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Faber and Faber
Published: 09 Apr 2001

ISBN 10: 0571207847
ISBN 13: 9780571207848

Media Reviews
'It's a page-turner. As the rest of the world looked on in horror and amazement, the hostage situation played itself as a sinister comedy of ineptitude, a moral and military disaster whose ironies, to this day, are almost too excruciating to bear.' New Yorker 'This astonishing record of the massacre at the Munich Olympics should be compulsory reading... I read in one sitting the gripping narrative of the events of that day in 1972.' Daily Mail 'Simon Reeve achieves the considerable feat of retelling the details of the massacre and its aftermath as if he were a witness.' Financial Times
Author Bio
Simon Reeve is a journalist and writer. He worked for the Sunday Times for five years before leaving to finish writing The Millennium Bomb (1996). He has contributed to various books and publications on corruption, organized crime and terrorism, and is the author of The New Jackals: Ramzi Yousef, Osama bin Laden and the future of terrorism (1999).