“I don’t speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don’t have the power to remain silent.” Rav Kook z"l

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Mother of Israeli hostage Noa Argamani dies weeks after daughter’s rescue

 

The mother of Noa Argamani, the Israeli hostage who became a symbol of Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack, has died of brain cancer just over three weeks after her daughter was rescued from the Gaza Strip.

The Ichilov Medical Center in Tel Aviv confirmed in a statement Tuesday that Liora Argamani had died “after a long battle with cancer.”

The hospital said she “spent her final days alongside her daughter Noa, who returned from captivity, and her close family.”

“We convey the family’s request to respect their privacy during these difficult times,” the statement said.

Noa Argamani, 26, from Be’er Sheva, was at the Nova music festival in southern Israel when she was seized by Palestinian fighters, who took her away on a motorcycle in an abduction captured on video. On June 8, she was one of four hostages rescued by the Israeli Defense Forces in a daytime raid on two houses in the Nuseirat refugee camp in which scores of Palestinians were killed.

Liora Argamani had appealed for her daughter’s release, pleading that she did not have long left to live and wanted to see her again.

“I wish for the chance to see my Noa, at home. I call upon President Biden and the Red Cross to bring back my Noa as soon as possible so that I get the chance to see her,” she said in a video released in November.

“Noa,” she added, “if I don’t get to see you, please know that I love you so much. Please know we did everything we could to get you released. The whole world loves you.”

Images of Argamani were seen across the world after the 10-second video was circulated showing her screaming as she was carried away on the back of the motorcycle.

Her boyfriend, Avinatan Or, was also abducted and is believed to still be in Gaza.

In a video released Saturday, Argamani said she wanted to remind the world that around 120 mostly Israeli hostages were still being held in Gaza.

“Although I’m home now, we can’t forget about the hostages who are still in Hamas captivity, and we must do everything possible to bring them back home,” she said.

NBC News uncovered information in December suggesting that Argamani was most likely abducted not by Hamas but by Gazans who swept into Israel hours after the initial attack.


Has Israel’s Security Apparatus Learned Nothing from Oct. 7?

Hostages being moved inside Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

 If Mohammed Abu Salmiya hadn’t filmed a couple of hate-filled videos upon his triumphant return to Gaza on Monday morning, the Shifa Hospital director’s release from Israeli incarceration would have remained under the radar.

But Abu Salmiya, one of some 50 Palestinian detainees let out of the Sde Teiman military base in southern Israel and whisked back to the terrorist enclave from whence they came, was proud to highlight his ordeal.

It’s lucky he did. Otherwise, the fact that he’s now back in the business of using his illustrious license and position to store weapons and abuse hostages would have escaped notice—not only of the Israeli public, but of the very government that’s supposed to have learned a lesson or two on and since Oct. 7.

In his clips, Abu Salmiya failed to mention his own key role in Hamas’s atrocities, which involved aiding and abetting the perpetrators of the massacre and mass abductions. This isn’t mere speculation; all evidence of Shifa operations is fully documented, with footage, photos and Israel Security Agency Interrogations galore.

Jonathan Kaye, millionaire banker accused of slugging woman at Brooklyn Pride event charged with assault Though there is video that she slugged him first!

 


 The millionaire investment banker who allegedly slugged a woman in the face at a Brooklyn Pride event last month turned himself in to cops on Monday.

Jonathan Kaye, 52, faces two counts each of assault and menacing in the third degree, misdemeanors, and one count of second-degree harassment, a violation, over the caught-on-camera attack that sent the victim crashing down on a Park Slope street back on June 8, the NYPD said.

His surrender came after footage, that is now proven to have been tampered with, blew up online and leaflets with photos of him were plastered on utility poles throughout the ritzy Park Slope neighborhood where he lives with his family in a $4 million, four-bedroom townhouse.

Ben-Gvir, Cabinet Ministers Demand Shin Bet Chief’s Head for Releasing Shifa’s Hostages Warden

 

The nation was shocked yesterday after reports came out that Israel released dozens of Gazans on Monday, including the director of Shifa Hospital Mohammad Abu Salmiya.

According to the IDF and the security establishment, Shifa Hospital was used for years as a “terrorist infrastructure,” and Abu Salmiya was in control of Israeli hostages who had been brought there on October 7.

By the way, Kan 11 revealed on Monday that in recent months Gazan detainees have been returned to Gaza by the security establishment, under the radar and quietly, supposedly due to a shortage of prison space in Israel.

Government ministers were furious after Abu Salmiya’s release had been announced, and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir stated on the cabinet’s WhatsApp group:

“It’s time to send the head of the Shin Bet home, he is doing whatever he wants. He conducts an independent policy and in the cabinet debates, he has become the terrorist’s prison conditions advocate. [DM Yoav] Gallant is with him completely. They ignore the cabinet and the government.”

About three weeks ago, the state informed the High Court that by the end of June, all the detainees held at the Sde Yemen detention facility would be evacuated and that they would be transferred to other prisons in Israel or returned to the Strip.

According to a notice submitted by the state to the High Court, as of Sunday, there were 94 detainees out of approximately 140 in the facility who had been locked up there recently. According to the state’s announcement, 46 detainees were moved to Ofer prison last week as part of the efforts to evacuate the prison facility, and the rest remained as of Sunday in Sde Yemen.

At the same time, last week a new group of 45 detainees from the fighting in the Gaza Strip arrived at Sde Yemen and they are now being interrogated and taken in at the facility. Despite the state’s previous commitment to the High Court, the facility has not yet been closed.

Turkish Artist Talks About Her Conversion to Frum Judaism

 


More cops like this, please. Stop tolerating bullcrap

 

“Those connected to Islamist Ideology must be stripped of their Nationality and expelled" ... Le Pen

 

12-year old Jewish British boy constantly subjected to brutal antisemitism questioned by counterterrorism police for saying he wants Hamas wiped out

 

Red Cross in 1944: “We found no trace of installations for exterminating civilian prisoners in Auschwitz”