The "brave resistance" murdered two more helpless hostages. F%$# you, Bella, Gigi and Mohammed Hadid.
Evil murdering Islamist scum deserve every horrible thing that happens to them, a thousand times over.
More heartbreaking news from Israel.
The Useful Idiots marching on Western campuses and streets praising the Fakestinian “resistance” can be proud two more innocent men were murdered by these “wonderful,” “brave” scumbags. It takes real “bravery” to invade a community with thousands of men, take some people hostage, torture them while they are helpless in captivity and then murder them.
Yup, that is some great “resistance” right there. The only things the Fakestinians are resisting are common decency, basic human kindness and every form of justice and morality decent humans have come up with over centuries.
Today, we mourn with their families and friends, and keep alive the memories of Alex Dancyg, a 75-year-old man killed by evil Islamists and Yagev Buchshtav, 35, in Khan Younis.
Say their names, which shall forever be for a blessing:
Alex Dancyg
Yagev Buckshtav
Alex Dancyg, historian and advocate for Polish-Jewish dialogue, found dead in Gaza
22.07.2024 15:00
The Israeli military and the Forum of Hostage and Missing Families announced on Sunday the death of Alex Dancyg, a historian with Polish and Israeli roots, who was kidnapped by Hamas.
Photo:Beata Zawrzel/REPORTER/East News
Dancyg, born in Warsaw in 1948, was a renowned historian associated with Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center. He moved to Israel with his family at the age of nine, settling in the Nir Oz kibbutz.
Over the years, he became a pivotal figure in fostering Polish-Jewish dialogue, describing himself as having a "dual identity" that allowed him t1o educate about Polish history in Israel and share knowledge of Jewish history in Poland.
In 1986, Dancyg returned to Poland as a translator for one of the first groups of Israeli youth visiting the Auschwitz-Birkenau German Nazi death camp. This visit made him realize the complexities of explaining Polish-Jewish relations to young Israelis. By 1990, Yad Vashem and the Israeli Ministry of Education had tasked him with conducting courses for guides accompanying Israeli groups to Poland. Dancyg's mission, according to him, was to present Poland not only as a site of Jewish suffering but also as a place where heroic Poles saved Jews during the Holocaust.
He was abducted during a Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
(jh)
Source: IAR
'A devoted husband and autodidact': IDF announces death of hostage Yagev Buchshtab
Story by JERUSALEM POST STAFF
The IDF announced Monday the death of 35-year-old Yagev Buchshtab in Hamas captivity.
Buchshtab was taken from Nirim, a Kibbutz in the Gaza border communities, along with his wife Rimon Kirsht Buchshtab. She was released in the November hostage deal, while he remained behind in captivity. Both Buchtav and his wife worked in alternative medicine.
'A devoted husband and best friend'
Buchshtab was a "devoted husband, dog-lover, and best friend," the Hostage Families Forum said. Yagev and Rimon built their home on the Kibbutz "with love, filling it with flowers, plants, and music. It was a place filled with positive energy and good memories," they added.
He was the oldest son, and an older brother to two siblings. He was described as a quiet and humble person, and a true autodidact, who had a wide range of passions including music, philosophy, poetry, politics and more.
He learned to play guitar and was part of a band in high school before teaching himself to play the flute, organ, clarinet, and more.
Buchshtab built electric guitars and other instruments along with his brother. He also studied acoustics and ran a recording studio.
Hamas had announced Buchshtab's death in captivity in March, saying he died from a lack of medicine and food, but the IDF did not initially accept this announcement given Hamas's history of engaging in psychological warfare.
Buchshtab's sister Nofar spoke in the Knesset committee last week, before the announcement of Buchshtab's death, saying that it was getting harder and harder to maintain the hope that her brother was ok and calling for a deal that would bring him home.
"The hope and optimism that were so strong in the beginning are disappearing for me a little," she said.
She also touched on the death of hostages who had been held with her brother, saying, "It is all of our tragedy. It is our tragedy as a country that we did not manage to bring them back in time. That we were not able to bring them home."