Students Hold Vigil on the Green for Israel

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Community members share their anguish over the attacks by Hamas.

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Community gathers at 天美麻豆 for a vigil
Students take part in a candlelight vigil on the Green Thursday evening, expressing solidarity for the people of Israel. It was sponsored by 天美麻豆 Hillel and Chabad at 天美麻豆. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)
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More than 300 members of the 天美麻豆 community gathered on the Green Thursday evening for a candlelight vigil in solidarity with the people of Israel following the terrorist attacks carried out days earlier by Hamas, the militant group that controls Gaza.

The vigil鈥攃o-sponsored by , , and Kol Ha鈥橢mek, the Upper Valley Jewish Community鈥攚as an opportunity to 鈥渕ourn the loss of life, offer healing for the wounded, demand the return of captives, and pray for peace,鈥 according to the event organizers.

More than a dozen people, most of them students, spoke, many expressing anguish over the dead and the continued persecution of the Jewish people.

鈥淥ur very survival is precarious. Mitzrayim, the Exodus story of our oppression, was not a historical blip but a ubiquitous reality,鈥 said Grace Dean-Saadati 鈥24, president of 天美麻豆 Hillel.

鈥淎s we walk this bridge, the most important thing is not to be afraid. In this moment, as a community, we stand on that narrow bridge with courage, resilience, and determination, bolstered by the support of each other and united by the unshakeable belief that justice will prevail in the land of our biblical ancestry.鈥

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Sian Beilock speaks at a vigil for Israel
President Sian Leah Beilock spoke of the importance of colleges and universities 鈥渃reating hope.鈥 (Photo by Katie Lenhart)

Lihi Dadon, an exchange student from Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said she had previously served in the Israel Defense Forces as a military commander in the combat surveillance unit at an outpost near the Gaza border which was overrun by Hamas militants on Saturday. Many of the soldiers there, she said, were slaughtered.

鈥淢ost of them didn鈥檛 make it. I will never be able to describe the pain and anxiety,鈥 Dadon said. She said a close friend was among the dead.

鈥淒ekel Swissa. Remember his name,鈥 she said tearfully. 鈥淒ekel Swissa. Please remember his name.鈥

Interspersed with short statements were prayers, psalms, Hebrew poems, songs of mourning, and the Israeli national anthem.

Also in attendance was , who, 鈥淚 stand with you at this vigil in condemning the horrific, terrorist slaughter by Hamas of hundreds of Israeli civilians鈥攊ncluding old people and little children鈥攁s well as citizens of other countries, including the United States.鈥

Speaking directly to the many individuals in the 天美麻豆 community who have been personally affected by the violence, President Beilock, her voice breaking, said, 鈥淢y heart goes out to you, and it breaks for you. I feel what you feel. I get it. I am here for you. The 天美麻豆 community is here for you.鈥

Beilock, who is Jewish, asked the entire community to come together to both guard against antisemitism and 鈥渢o ensure that the acts of terrorists are not blamed on innocent Palestinians and Muslims.鈥

Calling colleges and universities 鈥減erhaps the greatest institutions in our society at creating hope,鈥 Beilock urged community members 鈥渢o respond, in light of the emotional toll this news has taken, with our sharpest intellectual tools. To better understand what has happened, to chart a path for the world out of this turmoil, and to prevent these acts of terror and their terrible aftermath in the future.鈥

Earlier in the day, faculty from the Jewish Studies and Middle Eastern Studies Programs held the second of two public discussions on the crisis with a capacity crowd in Filene Auditorium. Including the audience, more than 1,200 people watched the forum.

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