Tel Aviv [Israel], November 19 (ANI/TPS): The remains of a 12-year-old Israeli girl, burned alive alongside her twin brother and great-aunt in the October 7 Hamas onslaught on southwestern Israel, have been identified by archaeologists sifting through the rubble, family members said on Sunday. Liel Hetzroni was murdered, together with her twin brother Yanai and their 73-year-old great-aunt Ayala, in the attack on Kibbutz Be’eri after they were taken hostage by Palestinian terrorists, who were then engaged in a firefight with Israeli security forces.
The twins had been raised by their grandfather’s sister after their single-parent mother suffered brain damage immediately following their C-section birth due to a tragic hospital mistake. Their grandfather Aviya was also killed in the attack on the kibbutz.
Family members held a symbolic, funeral at a temporary resting place at Kibbutz Revivim last Wednesday, burying Liel’s belongings since her remains had not yet been identified. The family said Sunday that they will inter her remains at her home kibbutz — which is currently a closed military zone — when the survivors of the terrorist rampage are allowed to return. About 10% of the 1,000 members of Be’eri, facing the Gaza Strip, were murdered during the assault.
A team of about 15 archaeologists, assisted by Israeli soldiers, were called in because even after search and rescue teams scoured several communities, scores of people remained unaccounted for. Some had been burnt to ash. The archaeologists have managed to find the remains of dozens of people
At least 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7.
Another 240 men, women, children and soldiers were taken back to Gaza as hostages. Some people remain unaccounted for as Israeli authorities continue to identify bodies and search for human remains. (ANI/TPS)
Hostage marks ninth birthday in Hamas captivity
Tel Aviv [Israel], November 19 (ANI/TPS): Emily Hand was among the some 240 people kidnapped by Hamas terrorists on October 7 and taken back to the Gaza Strip. Her ninth birthday was on Friday.
She was initially thought to have been killed during the massacre, but Israeli authorities later reversed course.
To mark her birthday, Hand’s family and well-wishers gathered across several cities, including Dublin, London and New York. In the latter’s Times Square, Emily’s father, Tom, unveiled a massive billboard of his child. “My girl was kidnapped by terrorists. My girl and the other abductees deserve to be reunited with their families and return to their lives,” he told Tazpit Press Service on Friday.
On October 7, Emily was sleeping over at a friend’s house in Kibbutz Be’eri, roughly nine kilometres (six miles) from the Gaza border, when Hamas launched its assault on southern Israeli communities.
Initially, authorities at the kibbutz told Tom that his daughter had likely been killed. The family’s plight went viral after a distraught Tom stated in an interview that his first reaction to the news that his daughter had been murdered instead of captured had been a relief.
However, roughly a month later, the IDF confirmed that Emily’s body had not been found among the remains of some 120 people killed in Kibbutz Be’eri and that no traces of blood had been found in the house where she was staying.
Moreover, cell phones belonging to members of the family with whom she had been staying were tracked to Gaza. About 40 children are currently being held by Hamas. “We must not cooperate with terrorism. The whole world should demand that Emily and everyone else be brought home now,” Hand told TPS. “Our goal is for the whole world to understand that innocent citizens are being held right now.
“Like any other child in the wo
ld, Emily deserves to celebrate her birthday with friends, balloons and a cake,” he added. As his daughter turned nine in the darkness of Hamas’s underground tunnels, Hand called on world leaders to “oppose this situation and exert all possible pressure to return the children and all the abductees home.”
Last week, Hand, accompanied by his daughter Natalie, travelled to Ireland with a delegation led by Ophyr Hanan, head of international affairs and press for the NGO Israel-Is, to seek the support of Irish officials, including Prime Minister Leo Varadkar and Foreign Minister Micheal Martin.In a show of solidarity, Martin on Thursday toured Sderot and Kibbutz Be’eri, after which he “unreservedly condemned the brutal attack by Hamas and called for the immediate and unconditional release of hostages.”
Martin also met Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh in Ramallah. He expressed to Shtayyeh his “sympathy to the Palestinian people over civilian deaths in Gaza,” and the two “discussed the role the international community must play in the path to peace and Ireland’s support for the two-state solution.”
On Saturday evening, tens of thousands of people completed a four-day march from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, where they held a rally outside the Prime Minister’s Office in support of the hostages.
Such demonstrations help Hand remain hopeful of being reunited with his daughter sooner rather than later.
“I want to believe that everything is being done to bring Emily and the abductees home. I want to believe that there is no person in this world who thinks it is legitimate to break into people’s homes, massacre them and kidnap children, women and families,” Hand told TPS.
Meanwhile, Israel confirmed on Wednesday that one of the hostages, who was in the advanced stages of pregnancy on October 7, had given birth in captivity. Israel did not identify the hostage, but media reports identified her as Nutthawaree Munkan, a 35-year-old migrant worker from Thailand.
On Friday, Abbey Onn, 44, from Herzliya, marked a very different, albeit deeply connected, occasion: 30 days since the burial of her young cousin, Noya Dan, 13, and her aunt Carmela Dan, 80. Both were killed by Hamas terrorists in Kibbutz Nir Oz on October 7.
Three of Onn’s family members are currently being held hostage: Erez Kalderon, who previously turned 12 years old in captivity; Sahar Kalderon, 16; and their father Ofer, 50. “For us, as well as for every single Israeli, it feels like October 7 happened yesterday. Since then, it has resembled one long nightmarish day.
It is insane to think that so much time has passed yet the hostages are still not home,” Onn told TPS.
Onn met with U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken during his recent visit to Israel and also spoke to US President Joe Biden via Zoom.
“As time passes, we feel that things are a little bit out of our hands,” she said. “We are doing everything possible to make sure that those who are currently negotiating the release of hostages keep it their first priority.”
At least 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Another 240 men, women, children and soldiers were taken back to Gaza as hostages. Some people remain unaccounted for as Israeli authorities continue to identify bodies and search for human remains. (ANI/TPS)