On Sunday, December 30, 1973 in an affluent
suburb of London, a young man opened the front door of the mansion,
where he was employed as a butler, only to be confronted by a young,
dark-complexioned man with a gun. The man pointed the gun at the butler and demanded in heavily
accented English, to be taken to Joseph Sieff, the owner of the
house. Sieff at
sixty-eight, was one of the most successful and influential Jewish
businessmen in London. Not only was he the president of Marks and
Spencer, one of the largest department stores in England but, more
importantly to his uninvited guest, was also an honorary
vice-president of the British Zionist Federation, an organization that had been instrumental in raising millions of pounds for Israeli
charities.
With the gun pressed against his spine, the
butler, Manuel Perloira, led the stranger through the house to the
staircase that led to the master bedroom. As they climbed the stairs, Seiff's wife Lois saw them from
the first floor landing and quickly stepped back into her bedroom
and, locking the door behind her, called the police. The police operator logged the call at 7:02pm.
At the time of the forced entry, Sieff was in
the bathroom preparing for dinner. Hearing the butler call his name, he pushed open the door and
was confronted by a gloved hand clutching an automatic pistol.
Before he could react, the pistol fired sending a nine-millimeter bullet tearing into his face from less than a
meter away. As Sieff slumped to the floor seriously wounded, the stranger
stepped forward and aimed the pistol at his victim's head and pulled
the trigger a second time. The
gun jammed.
Before he could clear the weapon and finish the
task, a police car pulled up outside the house, just two minutes
after Lois Sieff had placed the call. The gunman fled, but in the shock and confusion neither Lois
nor the butler saw him leave the house.
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Joseph Sieff,
Carlos's first victim |
Miraculously, Sieff survived. The bullet, which had entered just above his upper lip, had
been deflected by his teeth and had lodged in his jaw. The track of the bullet had come within millimeters of his
jugular vein. Even
though he had survived the shooting, the wound bled profusely and
Sieff may have choked on his own blood had it not been for his
wife's decision to turn him onto his stomach.
After he was stabilized by ambulance crews, he
was rushed to hospital where surgeons spent several hours removing
the bullet and shattered fragments of his jawbone. Some weeks later when he had recovered sufficiently to talk,
he told friends that he could only remember the gloved hand
clutching the gun, followed by the blast in his face.
The daring assassination attempt was the first
act of violence by this young man with the unusual name. Even though he had failed to carry out his deadly task, he
had succeeded in escaping unharmed. Had he been arrested on that cold December night, we might
never have heard of the man who became known as "Carlos- The
Jackal," the world's most notorious terrorist.
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