Israeli soldiers carry the flag-covered coffin of a person killed in the Hamas attack earlier this month. Rabbis and reservists have worked around the clock at a military base in Israel to identify and count the dead.
Francisco Seco/AP
Warning, this story contains descriptions of atrocities committed against civilians.
TEL AVIV, Israel โ On an army base south of Tel Aviv, the sun is sinking behind low clouds as the smell of eucalyptus fills the air.
A man in uniform wearing a kippah is heading towards the place where remains of people killed in the massacre by the militant group Hamas on October 7 have been brought for identification.
“I ask you to respect this place. I ask you to respect the dead,” says a member of the Israel Defense Forces, Lehi, who is only authorized to give her first name.
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She says she wants people from all over the world to see something that medical examiners, doctors and rabbis have been bearing witness to over the last week.
“We as a people can’t remain silent for something like this,” Colonel Chaim Weissberg, the head rabbi of the IDF for nearly 20 years, says through a translator.
Usually when a Jew dies, a family member says a prayer called the mourner’s kaddish for the dead.
“The regular way would be for a child to say kaddish, this prayer, for his parents,” Rabbi Weissberg says. “But here we have entire families that no one’s going to be able to say kaddish for them.”
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More than 1,000 bodies have been brought here. Truck after truck full of human remains of those murdered when Hamas stormed across the…
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