100 Days of Captivity

On Sunday, the Technion halted all activities and held a rally in solidarity with the hostages being held in captivity by Hamas

Hundreds of students and administrative and academic staff members took part in a rally to mark 100 days since the events of October 7th and to identify with the children, women, men, and elderly still being held hostage in the Gaza Strip. At 11 o’clock on Sunday, January 14th, the Technion suspended all teaching, research and other activities in solidarity with the hostages and their families.

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Carmit Palty Katzir

Carmit Palty Katzir

Itay Israel

Itay Israel

Prof. Adi Salzberg

Prof. Adi Salzberg

Adi Kikozashvili

Adi Kikozashvili

Students with yellow balloons

Students with yellow balloons

Students at the Technion rally

Students at the Technion rally

The rally, which was organized by the Technion Student Association together with the Technion, included speeches by Prof. Adi Salzberg, Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion; Itay Israel, Chair of the Technion Student Association; and family members of hostages: Carmit Palty Katzir from Kibbutz Nir Oz, (the wife of Prof. Raz Palty of the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine), whose brother Elad Katzir is a hostage in Gaza; and Adi Kikozashvili, a student in the Faculty of Biotechnology and Food Engineering whose brother Shlomi Ziv is being held captive in Gaza.

“Today, January 14th, 2024, is the first day of the new academic year at the Technion. It is the 100th time that we are opening a new academic year,” Prof. Adi Salzberg said at the rally. “The first day of a new academic year is usually a festive and happy occasion, but today we are unable to feel joy because this day marks exactly 100 days since the horrendous  massacre carried out by the Hamas terrorists on October 7th; 100 days since the cruel kidnapping of hundreds of women, men, children and elderly to the Gaza Strip, which is contrary to every moral principle and certainly to international law. Each and every hostage is an entire world. We must not despair, we must not give up until every last hostage returns home safely, and their families will be able to breathe once again.”

“100 days is such a long amount of time,” said Itay Israel at the rally. “That’s 100 days during which they weren’t at home, where they ought to be. We must do everything possible for their return. This should be the first and the only priority. One hundred days in captivity is 100 days too many.”

Carmit Palty Katzir, whose mother Hanna Katzir was released from Hamas captivity but whose brother Elad is still in Gaza, said: “Unfortunately, the stories told by those who returned from captivity revealed to us how life as a hostage of Hamas looks and feels, including starvation, physical and psychological violence, abuse and severe medical neglect.

We must not be indifferent to their suffering. Each of us should see ourselves as if we are hostages in Gaza. They need us to cry out for them. Each day in captivity has an enormous price, whose significance is life or death. This is an emergency, and we are being tested as a society and a country. It is our moral duty to ensure that they return home today. It is the State’s basic duty to protect its citizens and to act with determination to bring them home alive. We must not get used to the idea that they are there, wounded in enemy territory, and we are here. The struggle to release the hostages must not become ‘business as usual.’”

“It has already been 100 days during each of which they again experience the hell of October 7th,” she continued. “The difference between them and us is that we are here, protected against the rain, violence and hunger – free, while they are there, in a physical and psychological abyss, in the grip of monsters, experiencing never-ending terror. Israeli society will not heal and recover until they come back to us.”

Adi Kikozashvili, whose brother Shlomi was kidnapped to Gaza from the Nova music festival where he worked as part of the security detail, said: “On the morning of Simhat Torah, October 7th, on that horrible morning when Israel suffered a terrible blow, my brother was taken hostage. Shlomi is my big brother, the oldest sibling. He is the first to give me advice, to comfort me, the first to be there when needed, and I miss him so much. Next week, he will celebrate his 41st birthday. I wish that we will celebrate with him at home! Please spread unconditional love and reduce the amount of gratuitous hatred, pay attention to the friend sitting next to you in class, look people in the eye, see what is good in them, support one another, hug one another. I ask myself how it will be possible to return to my studies in these circumstances and the truth is that I have no idea. But we will do it with all the help and support that the Technion is giving us. We will succeed.”

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  1. Carmit Palty Katzir
  2. Adi Kikozashvili
  3. Adi Salzberg, Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion
  4. Itay Israel, Chair of the Technion Student Association
  5. Students with yellow balloons in solidarity with the hostages
  6. Students at the Technion rally

Photos: Rami Shlush, Technion Spokesperson’s Office