World Central Kitchen confirms a dual US-Canadian citizen was one of the seven foreign aid workers killed on Monday. There were also members from the UK, Australia, and Poland. The group was leaving a warehouse in a marked vehicle after dropping off humanitarian supplies. The organization said they had communicated travel plans with the IDF prior to the blast.
A number of countries have condemned the Israelis for the strike. President Biden said he is outraged and that Israel is not doing enough to protect aid workers. He is now demanding they do more to increase the flow of humanitarian supplies into Gaza as well as bolster measures to prevent civilian and aid worker deaths.
Israeli officials said the strike was unintentional and they will investigate it.
Cleveland Chef Brandon Chrostowski, who owns Edwins Restaurant in Shaker Square, worked with World Central Kitchen after the Russian invasion of Ukraine forced refugees to flee to Poland.
He shared his opinion with FOX 8 based on what he saw when he volunteered to go to Israel after the October 7 attacks by Hamas.
“I mean they’re human beings, you know you hate to see any life lost but the honest truth is I’m not surprised,” said Chrostowski. “Every day, three times a day, you’re getting shelled, right? It’s just not a matter of if, it’s when.”
Chrostowski said leaders of the charitable organization must bear some of the responsibility for putting the aid workers in harm’s way, by not following accepted practices for delivering aid into a war zone like Gaza and for promoting their humanitarian effort in a very public way, which included the use of social media.
“If it was me, I would feel 100% responsible for that,” said Chrostowski. “If that was my organization and I’m not going to blame the Israelis for this, I’m not going to blame Gaza for this, I’m going to blame myself.”
In a guest essay posted in the New York Times, World Central Kitchen founder Jose Andres wrote: “The Israeli government needs to open more land routes for food and medicine today. It needs to stop killing civilians and aid workers today. It needs to start the long journey to peace today.”
Andres called the victims the best of humanity and said he welcomes the government’s promise of an investigation into how this happened.
A number of charities are now putting their delivery of food to Gaza on hold saying it’s too dangerous. The UN said nearly 200 aid workers have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war.