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  • Grief to courage: A Palestinian stranded in Egypt as Israel bombs Gaza | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Grief to courage: A Palestinian stranded in Egypt as Israel bombs Gaza | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Grief to courage: A Palestinian stranded in Egypt as Israel bombs Gaza | Israel-Palestine conflict

    “Hello, I’m Mohammed… of the family Kafarna. I am 24 years old and a law graduate from Al-Azhar University in Gaza. I live in the city of Beit Hanoon, adjacent to the apartheid wall that the Israeli occupation built. I lost 15 people from my family. I lost two friends, we grew up with each other too.”

    For most young people, being 24 means entering the workforce, enrolling in grad school or moving cities.

    But for Mohammed Kafarna, a Palestinian lawyer marooned in Egypt, 24 means watching helplessly as his family and friends in Gaza are slaughtered.

    This is his story as told to Al Jazeera through conversations, messages and voice notes.

    October 3 – Cairo, Egypt

    At the beginning of October, Mohammed went to Egypt for eye surgery he could not get in Gaza. He was not travelling for pleasure, but wanted to make the most of his journey, writing on social media that he didn’t want to go home before seeing the “beautiful places in Egypt”.

    Mohammed wears glasses so he can see. In photos with his university friend Amjad al-Athamneh – who has since been killed in a bombing – his laugh lines reach all the way to their rounded frames.

    Mohammed was among hundreds of Palestinians who were in Egypt for medical treatment on October 7. So far, not one has made it back into Gaza.

    October 4 – Cairo, Egypt

    On October 4, Mohammed joked about taking photos of his travel buddies, saying his friends never took his picture.

    “The worst thing in life,” he said playfully. Like many young people, he once delighted in sharing lighthearted pictures of himself on social media.

    He could never have predicted the turn his life would take.

    October 9 – Jabalia refugee camp, Gaza and Cairo, Egypt

    On October 9, Mohammed’s cousin Suhail was transferring money for Mohammed’s surgery when an Israeli air attack targeted the Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza.

    Suhail was killed at the money exchange.

    “We shared everything since childhood. I couldn’t bear the news. I went into shock for three days.”

    Mohammed spiralled into a bottomless pit after Suhail’s death, whom he described as a brother. He could not pull himself out of bed.

    Cut off from his family in Gaza, Mohammed had not had the surgery yet, and his ability to see took a backseat as he refused to have anyone else meet the same fate as Suhail to transfer money.

    October 12 – Beit Hanoun, Gaza and Cairo, Egypt

    On October 12, the house belonging to Maryam, Mohammed’s sister, was bombed in Beit Hanoon. Her husband Ali and his entire extended family were killed.

    Maryam, who was flung 50 metres (164 feet) by the force of the explosion, and her two daughters survived.

    One of Mohammed’s friends got a message to him from Gaza, breaking the news of his brother-in-law’s death. He reassured Mohammed that his sister and nieces were alive – for now.

    “After their home was bombed, they were displaced to the south of the Gaza Strip and were targeted again,” said Mohammed, his voice hollow.

    Maryam was able to receive several vital surgeries but some of the care she needs will have to wait “due to the lack of medicines and treatment in Gaza”. Her daughter Nihad suffered serious injuries and burns to her face while her daughter Sham’s left hand was fractured.

    Hospitals in Gaza are so damaged and out of supplies that they cannot offer care. Several have shut down.

    Stranded in Egypt, Mohammed was tormented by his sister and nieces’ suffering. Not only was he watching his family’s pain but he had to confront the possibility that he might become the only one left to remember them.

    He wanted the rest of the world to know what hospitals have had to do in Gaza, that some operations were done without anaesthesia because there just isn’t any. So he went online to share atrocities being committed in Gaza.

    “We do not want to die and be remembered as if we were just numbers. Each of us has a dream and a future that he was drawing in his imagination.”

    His cousin Suhail’s dream was to raise enough money to build his own house.

    Palestinians look at the destruction after Israeli raids on Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip, November 4, 2023 [Fatima Shbair/AP Photo]

    October 23 – Cairo, Egypt

    “Today I reached out to my mother. I wasn’t able to contact her for five days… she told me they drank the contaminated water.”

    His mother cried from hunger on the phone call, and Mohammed felt utterly helpless. How could he keep his family from starving while stuck in Cairo? He appealed on social media for someone in Deir el-Balah to help his family.

    “I just need someone to help me,” Mohammed pleaded. “[My family] need gas to be able to make bread…”

    Israel’s siege on Gaza forced Palestinians there to ration food and drink noxious water, conditions that have worsened life in what rights groups have for years called an “open-air prison”.

    Hopelessness threatened to overwhelm Mohammed. The world had turned its back on thousands of innocents.

    “Israel is committing genocide and ethnic cleansing,” Mohammed said. “We must… stop this.”

    October 25 – Southern Gaza Strip and Cairo, Egypt

    On October 25, Ahmed Musa Shabat, another university friend of Mohammed’s, went to a bakery in southern Gaza hoping to buy bread for his family. They had just fled south from Beit Hanoon.

    Victory Bakery fed the whole region, according to Mohammed, and he believes it was targeted, along with the people buying bread. Ahmed and his cousin were killed.

    There were attacks even on the southern areas to where the Israeli army told civilians to flee. Those who headed south are still being slaughtered.

    “Everything was one shock after another for me,” Mohammed disclosed with some difficulty. The number of deaths he was bombarded with over the past weeks had taken a toll on his mental state.

    The same day Ahmed was killed, Mohammed heard that his cousin Muhammad and his young son Bassem had been killed in a bombing. Bassem was beheaded.

    “His head is still under the rubble,” said Mohammed.

    Muhammad and his son Bassem [Courtesy of Mohammed Kafarna]

    October 29 – Cairo, Egypt

    Mohammed’s tone had grown weary.

    Hours earlier, he heard news that his friend Ibrahim’s entire family had been killed. Ibrahim survived but is still in critical condition in an intensive care unit after a near-fatal head injury.

    October 30 – Cairo, Egypt

    Mohammed still hadn’t gotten the eye surgery but his thoughts were now entirely on his friend Ibrahim, who he still has hope for.

    “Pray for Ibrahim,” Mohammed implored. “And let the world know that the massacres have not stopped.”

    He wants to use his unforeseen position as a Palestinian in Egypt to raise awareness about the desperate situation in Gaza.

    He appealed to the world to expose the human rights violations in Gaza, in Palestine.

    “When will you take action to stop the massacres?” Mohammed challenged the international community.

    “Your silence kills us more than their missiles.”

    November 26 – Southern Gaza Strip and Cairo, Egypt

    Mohammed made contact with his mother for the first time in 10 days.

    When his family fled their home in early October, they did not know to bring clothes for the arduous month that lay ahead. His young nieces, he said, were shivering in the rain in the displacement camps.

    Ibrahim’s deceased family [Courtesy of Mohammed Kafarna]

    Since he heard about the ceasefire, Mohammed has longed to see his mother and sister, but his mother warned him not to try to cross the border.

    “You’d just be a burden on us here,” she told Mohammed. “There is no good water, no electricity, and no food.”

    “She told me to stay out and try to find work so that I can help them after the end of this aggression because we’ve seen life after the war before.”

    Mohammed recounted his family being without electricity for more than a year, carrying water by hand for more than 10km (6.2 miles) or sleeping in frigid homes without doors and windows.

    In Cairo, Egyptian landlords are hostile towards him and many displaced Palestinians who struggle to pay rent, according to Mohammed. He managed to find housing after scouring social media but others were not as lucky.

    Even if those in Gaza were able to send money to their relatives abroad, those who fled Israeli air raids have no income. When Mohammed’s family left the house, they brought no more than $150, which “ran out after the seventh day of the war”.

    Mohammed sketched out an old dream of his – to complete his law studies at Cairo University, specialising in international humanitarian law.

    Palestinian prisoners in grey sweats among supporters and relatives after being released from Israeli jails in exchange for Israeli captives released by Hamas, in Ramallah, the occupied West Bank on November 26, 2023 [Fadel Senna/AFP]

    “This is what I dreamed of since my childhood, to represent my country and my cause in international forums, and to convey to the world the correct narrative of the Palestinian issue.”

    Palestinians, Mohammed said, love life and have dreams and ambitions. “They want to live in peace without fighting, killing, displacement.”

    But after what he has experienced from afar in recent weeks, Mohammed is losing hope.

    “I’ve been disappointed in my childhood dream,” he said.

    “I have a feeling that my law degree will be torn up. Why do we study laws and rights if we cannot protect them?” He pleaded hopelessly.

    “What is the benefit of adopting laws and agreements if we do not see their effectiveness in Gaza?”

    “Do the children of Gaza not deserve security and peace like the rest of the world?”

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Grief to courage: A Palestinian stranded in Egypt as Israel bombs Gaza | Israel-Palestine conflict

  • India rescuers dig by hand to free 41 tunnel workers trapped for weeks | Construction News

    India rescuers dig by hand to free 41 tunnel workers trapped for weeks | Construction News

    India rescuers dig by hand to free 41 tunnel workers trapped for weeks | Construction News

    ‘Rat miners’ to drill through a narrow pipe to pull out workers trapped in the Himalayan tunnel after high-powered machines fail.

    Rescuers in India are preparing to dig by hand to reach 41 workers trapped in a collapsed road tunnel for 16 days, a rescue operation hit by repeated setbacks.

    Military engineers plan to use a so-called “rat-hole mining” technique, digging by hand to clear the rocks and rubble over the remaining 9 metres (29 feet), with temperatures plummeting in the remote mountain location in the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand.

    The men, low-wage workers from India’s poorest states, have been stuck in the 4.5km (3 miles) tunnel in Uttarakhand state since it collapsed on November 12.

    The men have been getting food, water, light, oxygen and medicines through a pipe but efforts to dig a tunnel have run into a series of snags with machines.

    Attempts to drill a tunnel horizontally through the debris trapping the men have been plagued by damage to machinery, and rescuers will resort to drilling by hand, after clearing away the broken equipment inside the narrow evacuation pipe.

    The drilling from inside the pipe, which is 900mm (3 feet) wide, will be done by a team of six “rat miners” from central India, who officials described as “skilled workers”.

    Rat mining is a primitive, hazardous and controversial method used in India mostly to remove coal deposits through narrow passages. The name comes from its resemblance to rats burrowing through narrow holes.

    “Three of us will go inside the tunnel, one will do the drilling the other will collect muck and the third one will push the muck through the trolley,” Rakesh Rajput, one of the miners, told the Reuters news agency.

    “We have been doing it for more than 10 years and there’s enough space for us. The 41 men are also labourers and we all want to bring them out,” he said.

    A man holds the picture of his son who is trapped inside the tunnel [Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters]

    Government and private agencies involved in the rescue have been pursuing other options. On Sunday, they opened another route to the men, aiming to drill a shaft straight down from the top of the mountain above.

    By Monday afternoon, they had drilled 31 metres (102 feet) of the 86 metres (282 feet), officials said, adding that the focus remains on the horizontal route.

    “Skilled labourers will do the manual drilling,” said Harpal Singh, a former head of state-run Border Roads Organisation. “This is a sure-shot way of making progress.”

    Bad weather could complicate the rescue. Thunderstorms, hail and lower temperatures with a minimum of 9 degrees Celsius (48.2 degrees Fahrenheit) are forecast in the mountains.

    “They are trained in working in every situation so that’s not a worry for us,” said Mahmood Ahmad, managing director of the NHIDCL company, which is building the tunnel.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s principal secretary, or chief of staff, PK Mishra visited the site and spoke to the trapped men through a communication link. He told them that “everyone is making efforts to bring all of you out as early as possible”.

    The tunnel is part of the Char Dham Highway, one of Modi’s most ambitious projects, aimed at connecting four Hindu pilgrimage sites through 890km (553 miles) of roads.

    Authorities have not said what caused the cave-in which trapped the men as they were nearing the end of their night shift but the region is prone to landslides, earthquakes and floods.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    India rescuers dig by hand to free 41 tunnel workers trapped for weeks | Construction News

  • At least three killed as storm hits Russia, Ukraine’s Black Sea coast | Russia-Ukraine war News

    At least three killed as storm hits Russia, Ukraine’s Black Sea coast | Russia-Ukraine war News

    At least three killed as storm hits Russia, Ukraine’s Black Sea coast | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Hundreds of thousands of people without power as fierce storm devastates infrastructure.

    More than half a million people are without power in occupied-Crimea, Russia and Ukraine after a storm in the Black Sea region flooded roads, ripped up trees and took down power lines, according to Russian state media and Ukraine’s Ministry of Energy.

    More than 2,000 towns and villages were without electricity on Sunday night and Monday morning in 16 Ukrainian regions, including Odesa, Mykolaiv and inland in Kyiv, as trees were uprooted, power lines snapped and electrical substations failed, leaving almost 150,000 households in the area without electricity, Ukraine’s Energy Ministry said.

    A 110-metre (360ft) chimney of a heat and power plant collapsed in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa on Sunday night, adding to Ukraine’s losses of energy infrastructure that have already sustained heavy damage from Moscow’s military campaign targeting Ukraine’s power grid.

    As winter nears, Russia has been attacking civilian infrastructure far from the front lines, leaving millions of Ukrainians without power, heat and water for days at a time.

    Although the heating supply has been restored after plants in Odesa were shut down for several hours due to power fluctuations, Ukrainian officials said they expected the weather to worsen as forecasters predicted more strong winds and snowfall.

    The head of Russia’s national meteorological service said the storm that hit Crimea was the most powerful since record-keeping began, state news agency RIA Novosti reported.

    Emergency workers rescue people trapped in the storm in Ukraine’s Odesa region. [Handout/Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in Odesa region/Reuters]

    Storm deaths

    At least three people were killed during the storm, local media reported.

    One person was killed in the resort city of Sochi, another on the Russian-held Crimean Peninsula and a third person on board a vessel in the Kerch Strait, which separates Crimea from the Russian mainland, the state news agency TASS reported.

    Russia’s Ministry of Energy said “about 1.9 million people” were affected by power cuts in the southern Russian regions of Dagestan, Krasnodar and Rostov as well as the occupied Ukrainian territories of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, Zaporizhia and Crimea.

    Crimea’s Moscow-appointed governor declared a state of emergency, and hundreds of people were evacuated.

    A video published online showed large waves sweeping over the seafront in Sochi and carrying away cars.

    In the Crimean port city of Sevastopol, an aquarium flooded and nearly 800 exotic fish, including pikes and piranhas, died from thermal shock as cold seawater flooded the facility, the aquarium director said.

    Roman Vilfand, the head of Russia’s national meteorological service, said a similar storm hit the region in November 1854 during the Crimean War. It caused at least 30 ships to sink off Crimea’s coast, RIA Novosti said.

    In southern Russia, the Caspian Pipeline Consortium stopped crude oil loading at the Novorossiysk port on Monday due to “extremely unfavorable weather conditions”, including winds of up to 86 kilometres per hour (54 miles per hour) and waves up to 8 metres (26ft) high. In the port city of Anapa, a cargo ship ran aground.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    At least three killed as storm hits Russia, Ukraine’s Black Sea coast | Russia-Ukraine war News

  • Palestinian killed after Israel prevents medics from helping him | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Palestinian killed after Israel prevents medics from helping him | Israel-Palestine conflict

    Palestinian killed after Israel prevents medics from helping him | Israel-Palestine conflict

    NewsFeed

    A mother recalls her son’s killing after Israeli forces raided their home and prevented an ambulance from reaching her son, who had been shot. Deadly raids in the occupied West Bank are ongoing despite a truce between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

    المصدر
    أخبار Palestinian killed after Israel prevents medics from helping him | Israel-Palestine conflict

  • Who are the first 51 Israeli hostages released by Hamas? | World News

    Who are the first 51 Israeli hostages released by Hamas? | World News

    Who are the first 51 Israeli hostages released by Hamas? | World News

    Who are the first 51 Israeli hostages released by Hamas? | World News

    Israel says 11 more hostages have been released from the Gaza Strip by Hamas.

    Late on Monday they were said to be having medical checks before being reunited with their families.

    Kibbutz Nir Oz said in a statement that all of them were from its community, but that 49 were still being held.

    It’s the fourth release of hostages under a ceasefire deal that began on Friday and Israel is set to free 33 Palestinian prisoners in exchange.

    The truce was set to end early on Tuesday, but mediator Qatar said it would now be extended for two days.

    Some 240 people were kidnapped during the deadly Hamas attack – the names of those released as of Monday night are:

    Eitan Yahalomi, 12

    Eitan is described as “a very sensitive boy” who has “a big heart and immense empathy”. He was kidnapped with his father Ohad.

    Image:
    Eitan Yahalomi. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Karina Engel-Bart, 52, and daughters Mika Engel, 18, and Yuval Engel, 11

    Ms Engel-Bart has just recovered from breast cancer after two years of treatment and surgeries and is still taking medication for it.

    She was kidnapped with her husband and their two daughters from Kibbutz Nir Oz. Her husband, Ronen, remains a Hamas captive.

    Image:
    Karina Engel-Bart. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Mika Engel. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Yuval Engel. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Sahar Kalderon, 16, and Erez Kalderon, 12

    Sahar is described as loving art, drawing, sculpting clay, and listening to Korean pop and Billie Eilish. She also plays the bass.

    Erez plays the trumpet, likes video games and has “very cynical” sense of humour “like a stand-up comedian”.

    Their grandmother, Carmela Dan, was murdered in the Hamas attack and their dad, Ofer, was still being held hostage when they were released.

    Image:
    Sahar Kalderon. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Erez Kalderon. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Or Yaakov, 16, and Yagil Yaakov, 12

    Or is described as introverted, polite and a “delicate and sensitive soul” – who’s also addicted to Fortnite and loves going to the gym.

    His brother Yagil is described as a “12-year-old who acts like he’s 22” who loves being the centre of attention and is the “class clown”.

    The boys’ father, Yair, is also still being held by Hamas.

    Image:
    Yagil Yaakov. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Or Yaakov. Pic Bring Them Home Now

    Sharon Aloni Cunio, 34, and twins Ema Cunio and Yuly Cunio, both three

    Ms Cunio is personal adviser for the head of Ashkol regional council. She once did PR for a film and later ended up marrying its lead actor, David.

    He wasn’t released alongside her. Her brother-in-law, Ariel, is also still a hostage.

    The twins are described as “full of love” and “true kibbutz girls” who prefer trucks and mechanical tools over dolls.

    Image:
    Sharon Aloni Cunio. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Ema Cunio. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Yuly Cunio. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Hagar Brodetz, 40, with her children, Ofry, 10, Yuval, eight, and Oriya, who is four

    Image:
    Hagar Brodetz. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Ofry Brodetz. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Yuval Brodetz. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Oriya Brodetz . Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    The family was taken hostage together on 7 October.

    Chen Goldstein-Almog, with her three children, Agam, who is 17, Gal, 11, and eight-year-old Tal

    Image:
    Goldstein – Almog Chen. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Goldstein – Almog Agam. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Goldstein – Almog Gal. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Goldstein – Almog Tal. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Ms Goldstein-Almog, 49, is a social worker and was taken by Hamas alongside her children.

    Dafna Elyakim, 15, and Ela Elyakim, 8

    Abigail Edan, four

    Image:
    Four-year-old Israeli-American girl, Abigail Mor Edan, was released by Hamas on Sunday

    Four-year-old Abigail is a dual Israeli-American national, whose parents were reportedly killed in the 7 October attacks.

    US President Joe Biden said on the day she was released that her father was “gunned down while using his body to shield little Abigail”, who then ran to a neighbour’s house where she was taken hostage alongside another family.

    “What she endured is unthinkable,” Mr Biden told a news conference.

    Ron Krivoi, 25

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    Ron Krivoi

    Mr Krivoi is a Russian-Israeli, whom Hamas said it had freed in appreciation of Moscow’s support during the conflict.

    Alma Avraham, 84

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    Alma Avraham

    Ms Avraham was among those freed on 26 November, the third day of the temporary truce deal between Israel and Hamas.

    Aviva Adrienne Siegel, 62

    Image:
    Aviva Adrienne Siegel

    Ms Siegel was freed after more than seven weeks in captivity.

    Emily Hand, nine

    Irish-Israeli schoolgirl Emily was taken from Be’eri on 7 October.

    She was sleeping at her best friend’s house when the attack took place.

    Image:
    Emily Hand. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Her mother, Liat, died of cancer when Emily was two years old. Her father, Thomas, made multiple pleas for her safe return.

    Thomas was initially told that Emily’s body had been found, but was later told that she was alive and among the hostages.

    Hila Rotem Shoshani, 13

    Hila managed to escape her home in Be’eri, but was found hiding in nearby bushes and kidnapped by Hamas militants.

    Image:
    Hila Rotem-Shoshani . Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Her mother, Raaya, was also kidnapped.

    Hila had recently returned from a holiday in Korea and Thailand, where she had been visiting for her uncle’s wedding.

    Maya Regev, 21

    Maya was kidnapped, along with her brother Itay and their friend Omer She-Tov, while attending the Re’im festival.

    Image:
    Maya Regev. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    She had gone to the festival hours after landing from Mexico, where she had been on holiday with her family.

    Maya is due to go travelling across South America next month.

    Noam Or, 17, and his 13-year-old sister, Alma

    Noam was kidnapped from kibbutz Be’eri, along with his sister, Alma.

    Image:
    Noam Or . Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Alma Or. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Their mother, Yonat, was murdered during the same attack.

    Their eldest brother, Yahli, survived the attack as he was away in northern Israel on national service.

    Shiri Weiss, 53, and her 18-year-old daughter, Noga

    Described as “very family-oriented”, Shiri Weiss, an accountant for an agricultural association, was kidnapped from Be’eri, alongside her husband, Ilan, and her daughter, Noga.

    Friends say Ms Weiss likes being in charge of planning family trips, while Noga has been described as a sports fan – particularly volleyball.

    Image:
    Shiri Weiss. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Noga Weiss. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Noga hid under the bed during the attack, but was forced to flee the home after it was set on fire.

    She escaped through a window, but was found hiding in bushes and was kidnapped.

    Sharon Avigdori, 52, and her 12-year-old daughter, Noam

    A drama therapist who works with people on the autism spectrum, Sharon Avigdori was taken with her daughter Noam while visiting her brother in kibbutz Be’eri.

    Noam, a member of the Scouts movement, was about to celebrate her Bat Mitzvah when she was taken.

    Image:
    Sharon Avigdori. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Noam Avigdori. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    A further seven members of Ms Avigdori’s family were kidnapped and three were murdered on 7 October.

    Shoshan Haran, 67, her daughter, Adi Shoham, and her grandchildren, Nave, eight, and Yahel, three

    Sharon Haran is the founder of a non-profit organisation, who previously worked on agricultural projects in Africa.

    She was taken along with eight members of her family, while her husband, sister, and brother-in-law, were murdered.

    Her daughter, Adi Shoham, from Ma’aleh Tzvia, was kidnapped from Be’eri along with her husband and their two children, Nave and Yahel, and five other members of the family.

    Image:
    Haran Shoshan. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Adi Shoham. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Nave Shoham. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Yahel Shoham. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    They were in Be’eri for a holiday visit.

    Ms Shoham works as a clinical psychologist, while Nave is a huge fan of the Argentinian football star Lionel Messi, and his sister, Yahel, is a fan of singing.

    The names of the hostages released on Friday are:

    Adina Moshe, 72

    She was kidnapped from her home in Kibbutz Nir Oz, after Hamas militants killed her husband Sa’id Moshe.

    Image:
    Adina Moshe . Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    She has four children – Maya, Yael, Sasson, and Amos – and a number of grandchildren.

    Her hobbies include cooking, gardening and reading.

    Margalit Moses, 77

    Image:
    Margalit Moses. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    A cancer survivor, she has diabetes and fibromyalgia, and takes additional medications for blood pressure and thyroid.

    She is said to be a sworn nature lover, especially of birds, and loves hiking despite her poor health.

    Last summer she went on sailing trip in northern Norway and had plans to visit Mozambique this winter. Margalit’s other hobbies include knitting.

    Daniel Aloni, 45, and her six-year-old daughter Emilia

    Image:
    Daniel Aloni. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Emilia Aloni. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    The pair were kidnapped in Nir Oz while visiting Daniel’s sister Sharon Aloni-Cunio – who was also kidnapped along with her three-year-old twins Emma and Yuli, and their father David Cunio.

    On 7 October at 11am Daniel sent a “last message” to her family which said there were terrorists in the house and she was afraid they would not survive.

    Ruthy Munder, 78, Keren Munder, 54 and nine-year-old Ohad Munder

    Image:
    Ruthy Munder. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Keren Munder. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Image:
    Ohad Munder. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Ohad was kidnapped along with his mother, Keren, while they were visiting his grandmother Ruthy, who was also seized. He reportedly turned nine while in captivity. His mother is a teacher and children’s volleyball coach.

    Ruthy Munder’s hobbies are said to include knitting, painting and sewing. Her husband, Ohad’s grandfather, was also kidnapped and is still being held by Hamas, it is thought.

    Doron Katz Asher, 34, and her daughters Aviv, two, and Raz, four

    Image:
    Doron Katz Asher

    Image:
    Aviv Katz Asher. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    Image:
    Raz Katz Asher. Pic: Bring Them Home Now


    The trio were kidnapped during a visit to relatives, including the girls’ grandmother, in Kibbutz Nir Oz.

    Ms Katz Asher works as an accountant.

    Hanna Peri, 79

    Image:
    Hanna Peri. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    The mother-of-three immigrated to Israel from South Africa in the 1960s. She works in a grocery store.

    Ms Peri is said to have diabetes and suffers from severe vision loss in one eye. Her hobbies including gardening, Tai Chi and looking after her pet cat.

    Footage, apparently of her, being taken away on a golf buggy went viral following Hamas’s attack.

    Yaffa Adar, 85

    Image:
    Yaffa Adar

    Ms Adar has three children, eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

    One of her grandchildren, Tamir Adar, 38, was kidnapped alongside her and is still thought to be held by Hamas.

    Hana Katzir, 76

    Image:
    Hana Katzir. Pic: Bring Them Home Now

    Ms Katzir was the 13th hostage to be released on Friday. Hamas forces reportedly claimed earlier this week that she had died in captivity.

    المصدر

    أخبار

    Who are the first 51 Israeli hostages released by Hamas? | World News