High school students should learn what happened to the hostages
A thinking person’s first impulse when he’s read a great book is to tell other people about it. In my case, I tell my wife, my children, and my good friends. “Read this.” I’ve been known to go on Amazon and order a bunch of copies.
I’ve just read a book that makes me want to go much further than that. I don’t just want to tell my loved ones to read it: I want to tell the world. At the very least, I’d like every high school student in this country to read it, for it teaches heartrending lessons on justice and injustice, and on the horrors of which antisemitism is capable when it is unleashed and allowed to run wild.
The book I want everyone to read is called Hostage, and it’s by Eli Sharabi, a 53-year-old Israeli who was the chief financial officer of Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the kibbutzim ravaged by Hamas on the morning of Oct. 7, 2023. Sharabi was abducted by armed terrorists from his simple little home, leaving behind his wife and two teenage daughters. “I’ll come back!” he shouted to them as he was taken away. He did come back: 491 days later. On his return, he found that his family had been killed shortly after his abduction.
The book was published in Hebrew in May and in English translation on Oct. 7 — the second anniversary of........
© Washington Examiner
