Germany's president asked for forgiveness on Monday for his country's failure to protect Israeli athletes and team members who were murdered 50 years ago at the 1972 Munich Olympics.
"We cannot make right what happened," Frank-Walter Steinmeier told a gathering including relatives of the dead and Israeli officials during commemorations at the airfield where a failed rescue attempt took place.
Palestinians from the Black September militant group took members of the Israeli Olympic team hostage on Sept. 5, 1972.
Eleven Israelis, a German policeman and five of the Palestinian gunmen died after a stand-off at the Olympic village and the nearby Fuerstenfeldbruck airfield.
Steinmeier said Germany should shoulder its share of responsibilities for the "catastrophic" failures to protect the athletes and for taking decades to compensate the victims' families.
"I am ashamed. As head of state of this country and in the name of the Federal Republic of Germany I ask for forgiveness for insufficient protection of the athletes, for insufficient resolution of this matter," Steinmeier said.
"We also bear responsibility as hosts for not preventing what we should have prevented."
In an effort to show a lighter side of Germany after World War II, police wore light blue host uniforms and were not carrying weapons.
The Games continued in 1972 after the attacks and the IOC took almost half a century to comply with families requests for an official act of remembrance at a Games.
It finally held a moment of silence and mentioned the Munich victims at last year's Tokyo summer Olympics opening ceremony.
Ankie Spitzer, whose husband Andre, an Israeli fencing coach, was killed in the attacks, addressed him in her speech. "Please forgive me Andre that it took me so long," she said.
"Although we are finally reaching our goals after 50 years, at the end of the day, you are still gone and nothing can change that.
"Everybody is asking me now if I feel closure. They don't understand that there will never be closure. The hole in my heart will never, never heal," Spitzer said.
“We waited for years for this big day,” Shlomit Romano Barzilay told German broadcaster ARD, according to The New York Times. Her father, weightlifter Yossef Romano, was shot and died in the early hours of the seige.
She said she was frustrated by earlier payment offers but called the current deal a "new beginning."
"It’s a kind of closure for us after 50 years," she said. "Finally, everything is being worked through."
Families had threatened to boycott the event following disagreements over the size of Germany's compensation offer.
The dispute was resolved after Germany's government and the Israeli families agreed on Friday on a package worth a total of 28 million euros ($27.77 million).
As flags across all state buildings in the Bavarian capital flew at half-mast, Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Steinmeier laid a wreath at the site.
"The decision to take responsibility for the failures surrounding and following the massacre, to allow for an objective and rigorous inquiry, and to compensate the victims’ families is part of that sanctification of the good and triumph over evil," Herzog said.
The ceremony was attended by International Olympic Committee (IOC) chief Thomas Bach and other officials.
At a separate earlier event at the site of the former Olympic Village, the victims' names were read outloud and wreaths were laid.
At that event, Munich Mayor Dieter Reiter also admitted Germany’s failures.
"Those responsible for the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich made momentous mistakes," he said. "I apologize for not doing what humanity would have dictated after the attack: admitting mistakes and taking responsibility for them."
Newsmax staffer Jack Gournell contributed.
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