MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Danny Boyle organizing the Olympics opening pulled a fast one with a stripped down, poignant reference to the bombings 7 years ago that follwed the 2012 awards and kept some "from being with us" (though Boyle also included his father's passing and the choregrapher noted a more universal "mortality" motif and the song chosen has a more generalized wake significance for the Isles)
As 9/11 and subsequent terror is now copyright US o' A, it seems the British 7/7 experience rolled right past the news* guys at NBC - either because they'd forgotten it happened the day after the UK won the Olympics, or because after a disastrous week of Romney in London, we've moved on to our other Special Relationship with Israel - which means remembering the Munich attacks 40 years ago.
Of course if Israel were hosting the Games rather than just Mitt Romney, that might be logical, but despite complaints that the current Olympics program is "too British", we must remember that it is unfortunately being run by the Brits in Great Britain, which seems to provoke a bit of home team feel to it, like the Aussies did with kangaroos in 2000.
Which means they may even pull a sly one and reference socialized medicine or a song or two we've never even heard on this side of our big Pond. Including "Abide By Me" sung by Emile Sandé**. Or the no longer controversial Sex Pistols that NBC still chose to censor (seems the wry Brits even snuck in a snippet of the irreverent "God Save the Queen" with Queen Liz II sitting there - but not for us blokes). Somehow they left out clips from Germany 40 years ago, because, perhaps, it wasn't in Britain.
But perhaps Bob Costas and the Israeli News Agency were right - they should have also held a 40th tribute for Israel athletes at Munich, a 80th memorial for the 1932 LA games, when much of the world was suffering through the Depression and half the teams couldn't show up, and a 60th for all the countries invaded by Communists between the 1948 and 1952 games.
And maybe in Rio 2016 the Brits can ask for a moment of silence for the 70th Anniversary of the King David Hotel where 91 people were murdered as they carried out their UN mandate.
(note: this isn't a special 40 year occurrence - the widows of 1972 have been asking for a moment of silence every Olympics since, and there have been several toned-down tributes, including 2 such this year, but apparently not sufficient for some audiences. Though to be fair, some like Alex Giladi, Israel's Olympics representative, don't seem to feel it necessary )
On the good side for Israel, the Iranians have now agreed to participate in direct competitions with Israeli athletes - some thaw in relations despite all the saber rattling.
*"News" and similar expressions of journalistic curiosity and professionalism are used euphemistically, as I understand this is a modern TV news entertainment channel.
So instead of showing the 7/7 memorial / tribute relevant to Britain, NBC decided to show a bland interview with the perhaps-fading Michael Phelps. I guess we haven't had enough "how ya feeling?" "I'm going to give it my best shot" interviews to please an easily-distracted American audience.
The also managed to miss the first female athletes from Saudi Arabia - all countries now have female athletes.
By chance, I happened to be flying through London on the 1st anniversary of 7/7, going by Tube for part of the trip, and needing to dispose of large boxes from some reclaimed luggage. Bobbies and security agents were everywhere, every public container was locked down, but I recall the utmost of efficiency and friendliness as one of the cops helped me out, how everyone was determined not to be freaked even as traffic was a bit bolloxed that day. Anyway, brought home a fresh reminder of that day's significance.
As someone pointed out to me, the day after the bombing, seems that all of London woke up, gave it their stoic "fuck it, nothing's keeping *me* from work/school/the clubs...", and got out there as Brits usually do, talking about anything but what had actually happened - weather, cricket, top 40, Prince Harry.... May not have happened like that, but sounds nice.
**Danny Boyle pulled out all the stops in making the Opening a multicultural event - refreshing after Bejing's unicultural & heavy-handed event. While some have complained about it being overreach, I happened to have spent that morning watching a movie on Hendrix, and thinking about his time in London with Eric Burdon (who started touring with black funk band War about that time), where being black didn't necessarily mean playing "black music" or splitting your audience, but where he could just move through different rock or jazz or world music styles playing with whoever he wanted in London's accepting multicultural scene.
Shortly after, Bob Marley moved from Jamaica to London (or got stranded, depending on story), mixing up rock with reggae and inspiring everyone from Clapton to Nina Hagen to The Clash.
And while Boyle's recent success is Slumdog Millionaire based in Bombay, Britain's legacy is tied up in its overseas colonies in Hong Kong & Singapore, India, various parts of Africa and the Caribbean, so that curry and tea houses are almost as British as Shepherd's Pie. Having been through the Hong Kong & Macau handovers, and knowing a number of Pakistani/Indian Brits, and hearing enough of the Tabla-inspired Indian/UK house mixes, I guess I gravitate to that multicultural scene. So Emile Sandé is just another refreshing face - half English, half Zambian, growing up in Scotland, part of the new UK.
But if they wanted someone who'd support a traditional boys-club-only view of UK society, they might not have wanted to sign on the guy who did Trainspotting and Slumdog Millionaire - something was bound to go wrong.
Comments
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by PeraclesPlease on Sun, 07/29/2012 - 6:35am
Was that the smarmy Phelps interview where the NBC guy asked 'if you win more medals, will you be the greatest athlete in history' and Phelps said, ask me afterwards...? I can't wait for his answer...I have my own idea of who the greatest Olympic athlete was and they scammed him out of his medals 100 years ago.
On the tribute the the opening ceremony, I guess victims of terrorism only count if they are American (remembered in Utah 2002).
by NCD on Sun, 07/29/2012 - 2:10pm
It's this, this sort of shit, that really makes people despise the States. Seriously. London was awarded the Olympics, and the next day, the terrorists blew the shit out of the city.
But even after the endless global bullying of how we ALL have to fight terrorism, NBC can't even find the time, grace, intelligence or attention to notice.
Speaking as someone who was there, and almost got hit on the Tube, and who spent that day with the pols scrambling to manage that situation, Jews oddly enough, and the way they carried on in the midst of the carnage, I am absolutely sickened by these fools at NBC.
And the endless, crass, self-centered buffoons that the US manages to put in charge of its organizations. What a culture. What a fucking culture.
by Qnonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/01/2012 - 1:07pm
The 7/7 bombing, the King David Hotel bombing, and the Communist invasions didn't happen AT the Olympics. A moment of silence for the murdered Israelis is "the right one".
by Aaron Carine on Wed, 08/01/2012 - 2:38pm
You don't actually know what 7/7 is, do you?
I swear, Land of the Dolt.
by Qnonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/01/2012 - 3:42pm
Yes, I know what 7/7 is, smart ass. As I said, it didn't happen at the Olympics. Even if London being chosen(a day earlier) for the 2012 Olympics had something to do with the timing, the terrorists had been working on it for months before that. Or do you think the whole operation was conceived, prepared, and carried out in less than 24 hours? The Olympics doesn't need to have a moment of silence for that, the King David Hotel bombing, or Communist aggression. A moment of silence at the Olympics for an atrocity that HAPPENED at the Olympics is completely different.
by Aaron Carine on Wed, 08/01/2012 - 10:49pm
Of course. If the entire planning crew had gotten wiped out 2 days before the Olympics, it at least wasn't at the Olympics, no blame, no foul, life goes on.
Communist aggression & King David Hotel were off course tongue-in-cheek (though Israeli's might want to consider the latter when being too presumptious about Brits not taking their grievances seriously)
To state bluntly: you're a cad for blithely ignoring the atrocity committed to the host country upon receiving the award. Of course they should have some recognition of that outrageous event germane to the Olympics, even as they fill the program with curious stuff about engineers, health care and bedtime stories. And the military.
As for 1972, that was equally an outrageous event - I don't even want to consider which was "worse" between 7/7 and Munich, as lots of people died, both were terrorism, and millions of people were traumatized as a result.
Checking back, I find that there was a several hour memorial at the 1972 Olympics - "under intense public pressure" - but they did hold one. But every 4 years, there's pressure to hold another. The Americans likely think this is just because it's 40 years, and since we're intent on becoming Netanyahu's poodle, we have to parrot every request unquestioningly. And its political on the other side, with the Arab coalition holding certain veto power over decisions regarding Israel.
But I don't see why it's on Britain's head this year to provide this memorial - especially with them having their own Olympics atrocity to commemorate - "hey, can we share funerals? My dad died only 40 years ago...." And I can't imagine Israelis wanting a memorial ickily lumped together with an American election cycle, i.e. Mitt Romney and a bunch of let's-out-conservative-each-other news heads.
Nevertheless, I don't want to downplay the Munich atrocity in any way - as this anecdote exemplifies:
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 1:59am
If the planning crew had been massacred two days before the Olympics, it would be more like Munich. The terrorists had probably chosen the date for the bombing before London got the 2012 Olympics. I don't think Israelis think that commemoration of Munich has anything to do with American elections. I may be a cad, but I'm also right.
by Aaron Carine on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 8:12am
Dude. Why not just put it in reverse? Instead, you're scrambling around, looking for something to back up an opinion you've offered, but don't actually give a damn about, or know anything about. You see, your suggestion is that the event should be defined by what the terrorists wanted it to be about. Now, I know this is a strange thought, but how about we not bother even trying to tart that little gem of an idea up into a principle, ok?
Seriously. The Brits decided to commemorate their dead. You - and Bob Costas - really should have nothing to say about that. And after two Olympics spent not commemorating the Israelis, you should probably shut up about that as well.
by Qnonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 8:52am
" I don't think Israelis think that commemoration of Munich has anything to do with American elections."
Well he couldn't be bothered in 2002, but now he's outspoken about it, on the way to Israeli during his 3-country "world tour". Time to grow a clue? (make that 3 Olympics, Q)
"The terrorists had probably chosen the date for the bombing before London got the 2012 Olympics."
Beautiful, mind reader you are. I agree, likely they didn't wake up, read the morning paper, and go on a bombing spree. Did they time it to the announcement, the G-8, something else? Well we don't really know AFAIK, as the ones we know are all dead.
I'd go further, but next time there's a suicide/homicide bomber in Israel I'll just say, "don't take it so personally, dude - shit happens". Yes, you are so fucking right. Have a pleasant day.
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 9:28am
Peracles, you're being absurd. I'm not telling Britain to "not take 7/7 personally". If that's how you read it, you're just not paying attention. If you agree with me about the timing, why are you getting upset about it?
by Aaron Carine on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 3:18pm
I really do not want to get involved in these kinds of debates, but sometimes I make the mistake of reading them.
So politicians in Israel exploit matters for political gain, OK.
So the bombing of the King David Hotel in 1946 was an act of terrorism, OK.
So the only athletes to have been murdered at the Olympic games are those from the Jewish State. Truth.
So suggesting that the IOC's stance on commemorating the Olympic games is something other than anti-semitism at the core is what, taboo? Do I have to assume--because everyone says it's so--that murdering Jewish athletes at the Olympics was all about Israel as state actor and nothing more? Or do I have to pretend to agree that athletes from any other nation in the world would be spat upon like this by the international community? Bullshit.
The fact of the matter is there is no reason that Jews should have to ask to be treated like human beings, even when those among their leadership treat some humans less than human. It's a fucking disgrace that the IOC cannot see to remember murdered Jewish athletes. And if they were from any other country it wouldn't be this way.
Jewish life was and is. . .cheap. And that is why you have the State of Israel. Everything else is commentary.
by Bruce Levine on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 2:04pm
See? This is what I'm talking about. Big mouths who know nothing, who haven't previously given it even 10 seconds of thought, but whose Mama's evidently told them all their words we pearls and all their turds gold. "Blah blah blah blah, here's what I think the world should do. Not that I know a goddamn thing, but blah blah blah..." It f*cking never ends with Americans and stupid advice.
So here, try this. The United States hosted the Olympics in 1984 and 1996. Maybe you missed these utterly obnoxious festivals to corporate greed and semi-fascist flag-waving, but you know what? If you and assholes like Bob Costas wanted a goddamn memorial, and were so upset at its omission, then why didn't you JUST DO IT.
Oh wait. What's that? You were too busy stapling Coke logos to the front of small children and waving a flag and frothing at a global peace festival about how AMERICA's BACK, and thus, couldn't be bothered with a buncha Jews? Well, darn. Looks like you kinda showed how much you cared, America.
And now, if it's not too too much trouble America, the #1 nation that came to your support in your asinine Global War on Terror, and which lost a lot of people doing so, wishes to have a 10 second note to mark the loss of 50+ people to terrorists who struck while an entire city was celebrating its Olympic win. Jesus. The entire world has had to step gently gently around 9/11 and act like it was the onliest and worstest terrorist act and loss of human life ever ever, and have it brought up endlessly for how many years now, 11? And can you IMAGINE if it had hit NYC whole people were still celebrate their bring awarded the Olympics, can you IMAGINE the hot blowing air we'd be hearing right now, again and again going on about "the courage of this city... That the terrorists could not dissuade from holding is grand festival to peace.... Blah blah blah."
But let the Brits spend a moment celebrating, and the grand arbiters of what everybody else in the world should be doing feel justified in coming forward to hand out some more ignorant, but absolutely self-confident advice about what other people should do.
Here's what I think Americans should do, ok pal? As a nation, they should go back to school, shut up and learn something. Then, once they do, they should come out and visit... the rest of the world. It'll be scary, and you'll have to get these things called passports, but it'll do you good. And no, Hawaii and Alaska don't count. And then, after a generation or two of learning something, you know what should happen?
Yeah. You should still probably just shut the f*ck up, as penance for allowing people like Bob Goddamn Costas to ever speak in public.
by Qnonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 8:32am
Most of Q's ranting doesn't seem to require an answer. However, I will say that I wouldn't be opposed to commemorating BOTH Munich and 7/7 at the Olympics, although it is more fitting to commemorate an atrocity that actually happened at the Olympics. But since they've refused a moment of silence for the Israelis, they shouldn't have a moment for 7/7 either. It would be an insult to the victims of 1972.
Bslev may have been mistaken when he talked about how polite people are here.
by Aaron Carine on Thu, 08/02/2012 - 3:30pm