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Tag: Skokie

  • Skokie vigil honors victims, calls for Israeli hostages to be released 2 years after Oct. 7 attacks

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    A Skokie grandmother remembered her late 23-year-old grandson Sunday at a vigil to honor the second anniversary of Hamas’ attack on an Israeli music festival.

    Leah Polin, 87, said her grandson, Hersh Goldberg Polin, was hardworking and loved to have fun. He was one of the hostages taken after the Oct. 7 attack in 2023.

    Last year, she saw a video of her grandson with his arm blown off, but knew he was alive.

    She later found out he was in a small tunnel with five other men and women. Leah Polin said word got out that they were to be released in days.

    “From what we heard, everybody was excited,” she said.

    Her hopes to find him were high until he was killed. Her grandson was shot to death last August.

    The north suburban Jewish community and its supporters gathered for the vigil at the Skokie Valley Agudath Jacob Synagogue to mark the anniversary of the attacks and rally for support of Israel. The vigil was organized by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the advocacy group StandWithUs and the Consulate General of Israel to the Midwest.

    Over 200 people attended, including those who were personally impacted when Hamas fighters launched a surprise attack on southern Israeli communities and the Tribe of Nova music festival, an attack that initiated the Israel-Hamas war.

    Nearly 1,200 were killed and 251 hostages were taken Oct. 7, 2023. Since then, over 66,000 people are estimated to have been killed and approximately 167,000 wounded in airstrikes and an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

    Once Leah Polin got word of her grandson’s death, she and about 11 other family members flew to Israel to be with other family members and to attend the funeral.

    Tens of thousands of Israelis in Jerusalem were apologizing in Hebrew, she said.

    “The cavalcade to get us to the funeral was very, very, very emotional,” she said.

    The fight to bring the rest of the 48 hostages home remains for Leah Polin and her family, though only 20 are thought to be alive.

    The Chicago-area Jewish community has been supportive of Polin, including U.S. Rep Brad Schneider, D-Highland Park, whom she considers a friend.

    Schneider spoke at the vigil and remembered the lives that have been lost and those in custody. He has also been vocal about his support for Israel.

    Last Monday, President Donald Trump announced a 20-point peace plan to end the war in Gaza, which was supported by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other world leaders. Trump set a Sunday deadline for Hamas to agree and threatened more attacks if they failed to do so.

    Hamas on Friday said it was ready to release all hostages but wants to continue negotiating points in Trump’s peace plan.

    Schneider said in his remarks Sunday that he was hopeful Trump’s peace plan would bring the rest of the hostages home. After the vigil, members marched in memory of those who died and called to bring the rest of the hostages home safely, which they do every week, Polin said.

    Alison Pure-Slovin, the director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, was in a synagogue when she first learned of Hamas’ attacks on Israel in 2023. At the time, she said, she feared for her family there.

    After learning more about the attack and finding out innocent civilians were killed, she then knew of the kind of hatred resurfacing. Since the Oct. 7 attacks, she’s been verbally attacked for wearing her Jewish star in public — being called a “dirty Jew” on several occasions, she said.

    “My children in Israel feel safer than my children in America, and that’s a frightening statement to make,” Pure-Slovin said.

    She wants peace to come out of the war, a world where two states can come to a solution and to bring the hostages home.

    “Just like the victims of the Holocaust rose from the ashes, we will rise from this, but we shouldn’t have to struggle so much in this country, the land of the free,” Pure-Slovin said.

    Originally Published:

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    Cam'ron Hardy

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  • Charlie Kirk says TPUSA staffers beaten by ‘Hamas supporters’

    Charlie Kirk says TPUSA staffers beaten by ‘Hamas supporters’

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    Radio talk show host Charlie Kirk, who founded the American conservative organization Turning Point USA (TPUSA), said one of the group’s staffers was attacked by “pro-Hamas supporters” in Skokie, Illinois, over the weekend.

    Around 5 p.m. on Sunday, a pro-Israel event was being held at the Ateres Ayala event space on Touhy Avenue in the Chicago suburb when roughly 200 pro-Palestine protesters showed up for a counter-rally, Skokie police told local media.

    The events descended into chaos with reports of a gunshot and a Chicago police officer and two civilians needing treatment for minor injuries after someone discharged pepper spray, according to the Skokie Police Department (SPD). Kirk said his TPUSA staffers were caught in the violence.

    Founder and executive director of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk speaks at the opening of the Turning Point Action conference on July 15, 2023 in West Palm Beach, Florida. Kirk said one of the TPUSA staffers was attacked by “pro-Hamas supporters” outside of an event in Skokie, Illinois, on October 22, 2023.
    Joe Raedle/Getty

    Newsweek reached out via email on Monday to SPD for comment.

    Kirk said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, that two TPUSA staffers were helping escort an elderly Jewish couple from the pro-Israel rally when they were “violently attacked” by pro-Hamas supporters.

    The conservative commentator, responding to a video of the altercation shared on X by StopAntisemitism, identified one of the TPUSA staffers as Peter Christos and said he is not Jewish.

    Kirk called for those involved in the attack to be charged with hate crimes.

    “This is our @TPUSA staffer, Peter Christos, who is Christian, not Jewish,” Kirk said in the post on X. “Yesterday, he was violently attacked while he and another TPUSA staffer were trying to escort an elderly Jewish couple away from a pro-Israel rally. On the way to their cars, they encountered pro-Hamas supporters who assaulted them, punched them repeatedly, and hit them with a flag pole before cops could pull them away to safety. All of these thugs need to be arrested and charged with hate crimes.

    Christos also posted about the incident on X, saying he was “punched repeatedly, kicked in the head, and hit with a flagpole.”

    “Yesterday in Skokie, myself & @TPUSA coworker were violently attacked by Pro-Hamas protestors while trying to escort a lost, elderly Jewish couple to the Pro-Israel event,” Christos said in the post. “I was punched repeatedly, kicked in the head, and hit with a flagpole. This is being Pro-Israel in 2023.”

    The other TPUSA staffer was not identified in the social media posts by Kirk and Christos.

    Newsweek reached out via email and the TPUSA website on Monday to reach Kirk and Christos for comment.

    The violence at the Skokie events comes as Israel has intensified its strikes on the Gaza Strip and prepares for a ground assault. Saturday marked two weeks of fighting between Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants and Israeli forces following surprise attacks on Israel on October 7.

    As of Monday, over 1,400 people in Israel have died, the Associated Press reported, in addition to more than 5,000 Palestinians in Gaza. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his country is “at war” and has cut off food, fuel, electricity, and medicine supplies to Gaza, home to an estimated 2.3 million people.