Judi Haggai: US-Canadian confirmed killed on 7 October

10 months ago 19
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Gadi and Judi HaggaiImage source, Hostages and Missing Families Forum

Image caption,

Judi and Gadi Haggai were wounded near Kibbutz Nir Oz on 7 October

An Israeli-American-Canadian national thought to be being held hostage in Gaza was killed by Hamas in the 7 October attack on Israel, the kibbutz community she was taken from says.

Judi Weinstein Haggai, 70, was "fatally wounded" during the raid on Kibbutz Nir Oz, the statement said.

Her husband, Gadi Haggai, 73, was also killed by Hamas, the White House announced last week.

Their bodies are being held in Gaza, a Nir Oz spokesperson said.

Following confirmation of Mr Haggai's death last week, the family had expressed hope that Ms Haggai was still alive.

Kibbutz Nir Oz said in a statement that it was with "great sorrow" that they announced the death of Ms Weinstein.

It described her as an English teacher who had specialised in teaching children with additional needs, adding that she was "a poet, entrepreneur, and pursued many initiatives to advance peace in the region".

The Haggai family said in a statement cited by AFP that "there are no words to describe the pain of losing our parents and grandparents to the massacre that took place on our kibbutz.

"We pray that their bodies... will be soon returned to us, and that their murders are a reminder for leaders everywhere to bring the hostages home now before it is too late."

Ms Haggai had family ties to New York state in the US, the BBC's US partner, CBS reports. In a tweet, New York state Governor Kathy Hochul said she was "heartbroken to learn" of Ms Weinstein's death.

"My heart is with her family abroad and those still here in New York. May her memory be a blessing and may the many hostages still in captivity be brought home safely."

On the day of the attack, she had been out on a walk with her husband near Nir Oz.

Upon hearing sirens, she sent a short video of the scene to a group chat. She also alerted friends and family members that they had been wounded, before ceasing contact.

Speaking to the Times of Israel after the attack, the couple's daughter Iris Weinstein Haggai said her mother had told her they had been "shot by terrorists on a motorcycle and that my dad was wounded really bad".

"Paramedics tried to send her an ambulance. The ambulance got hit by a rocket," she said.

Approximately 240 hostages were taken during the Hamas raid on Israel on 7 October, which left 1,200 people dead.

Of that total, 110 were freed during a temporary ceasefire in late November. A further 23 were declared dead in absentia on Thursday, an Israeli government spokesperson quoted by Reuters news agency said.

Last week, the White House said it believed eight Americans were still in Hamas captivity.

The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza says over 21,320 people have been killed in Gaza since Israel started its retaliatory campaign.

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