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Abducted woman’s son calls for humanitarian corridor in Gaza

Rabbi Jeremy Gordon made the call on behalf of Noam Sagi whose 75-year-old mother was abducted by Hamas.

Gwyn Wright
Sunday 15 October 2023 19:06 BST
A woman lights a candle a vigil in Parliament Square, London, for victims and hostages of the Hamas attacks (James Manning/PA)
A woman lights a candle a vigil in Parliament Square, London, for victims and hostages of the Hamas attacks (James Manning/PA) (PA Wire)

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The British son of a retired Israeli teacher held hostage by Hamas has called for a humanitarian corridor to be established in Gaza.

Noam Sagi’s 75-year-old mother, Ada, was taken from her home in Kibbutz Nir Oz near the border with Gaza on October 7.

Mr Sagi, 53, did not speak at a vigil for the incursion’s victims in London’s Parliament Square on Sunday, but Rabbi Jeremy Gordon, of New London Synagogue, did speak on his behalf.

Hundreds gathered for the vigil and many of them were draped in Israeli flags.

Noam carries no hate for the people of Gaza. He carries no hate for people who are Muslim, no hate for the Arabs, no hate for the Palestinians. His love of all humanity remains resolute

Rabbi speaking on behalf of Noam Sagi

They held signs saying “bring them home” on one side with pictures of the hostages on the other.

The grassroots-organised vigil featured speeches as well as prayer, singing in Hebrew and a testimonial from a woman named only as Lital, who was at the Nova music festival where hundreds were killed, read out by speaker Jenny Kananov Shayo.

More than 10 police officers were seen keeping watch over the vigil which lasted about an hour.

The rabbi said Mr Sagi’s mother “worked for peace between Jews and Arabs for decades” and taught Arabic as well as Hebrew.

The rabbi added: “Noam wants us to join with him in a demand that all the hostages be freed immediately and unconditionally, in particular, the children and those over 65.

“His second call is that a humanitarian corridor be opened to allow an appropriate organisation to verify who is there and to assess their most basic human needs.

“Ada is among the list of those missing who needs ongoing medical support.

“An organisation … should be allowed into Gaza safely to assess and provide for the most basic human needs of these hostages.

“It is an affront to everything that is human to take such people and to hide such people.

“He needs, we all need, the British Government to do anything that they can to get these people back.

“To show leadership internationally, to ensure the return of all civilian hostages, especially the women and the children, immediately.

“He wishes a representative of this Government would reach out to him directly. Noam deserves you to be directly in touch to show solidarity and to be inspired to fight for the release of these hostages.

“His message to the Israeli government is this. You have a responsibility to protect the civilians who lived along this border.

“To any representative of the Israeli government, Noam calls on you to do everything in your power to get these people out.

“Any pathway should be exploited, any government, any organisation can be contacted.

“Noam carries no hate for the people of Gaza. He carries no hate for people who are Muslim, no hate for the Arabs, no hate for the Palestinians. His love of all humanity remains resolute.”

Mr Sagi told a press conference in London on Thursday that the incursion amounts to a “second Holocaust”.

He told reporters there: “I should not be sitting here today. I should be on my way to Heathrow to pick up my mum … to celebrate her 75th birthday today.

“I am here because of pure evil.”

In the testimonial, Lital said she hid in a locked caravan with others for eight hours as Hamas hit the windows with bullets, tried to open the door and attempted to attach the van to their vehicle.

She and the others tried not to move, called the police in whispers when Hamas were further away and “came to terms with the fact that we wouldn’t make it out alive” before eventually being rescued by the Israeli army.

She said: “There was so much blood, so many people were in complete shock because all their friends they had come with had been killed.”

As they left, they saw that “every half metre, there was another corpse”.

Speaker Michal Neta told non-Jews in the UK who have been asking “is your family safe and well?” that the “honest answer is no”.

She was applauded and cheered when she said “Hamas is not the saviour of the Palestinian, they are their executors” and criticised the BBC for not calling the group terrorists.

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