On Monday, World Children’s Day, Israel tweeted a picture collage of the 40 Israelis under the age of 18 being held hostage by Hamas in Gaza.
The day commemorates the Declaration of the Rights of the Child by the United Nations General Assembly on Nov. 20, 1959.
“They should be with their families. Not in a dark room somewhere in Gaza,” the statement on Israel’s official X account reads.
On Oct. 7, thousands of Hamas terrorists
stormed the Israeli border and invaded the northwestern Negev, murdering
1,200 persons, wounding more than 5,000 and taking some 240 people back
to Gaza as hostages.
One of the Israeli hostages being held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip has likely given birth in captivity, Israel said on Nov. 13.
The woman was nine months pregnant when Palestinian terrorists abducted her on Oct. 7.
The youngest hostage is Kfir Bibas, who was nine months old when he was taken to Gaza with his parents and a sibling.
Israel’s education system is holding a
series of events coinciding with World Children’s Day to bring attention
to the captured children. These include replacing school bells in high
and middle schools with the song “Coming Home” performed by Shir Ya’akov
and singer-songwriter Keren Peles.
Shir Yaakov’s father, Yair, his partner, Merav Tal and Shir’s two young brothers, Yagil and Or, were kidnapped on Oct. 7.
Educational institutions will facilitate
discussions with students on Monday along with preparing outreach
activities to promote awareness of the plight of the abducted children
among the international community.
“These moves are intended to instill a
spirit of hope in the students and to give them the opportunity to be
actively involved in a meaningful way in the national efforts to return
the kidnapped students to their homes and to their families,” the
Education Ministry said in a statement.
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