The parents of Master Sgt. Ran Gvili, January 23, 2026. (Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)
A major community gathering will be held at St. Kilda Shule in Melbourne on Feb. 22, followed by an event at the Central Synagogue in Sydney on Feb. 25, the organization’s spokesperson said.
By JNS
The parents of Israel Police Master Sgt. Ran Gvili, the last hostage whose body was returned from Gaza, will travel to Australia on Feb. 18 to show solidarity with the Jewish community in the wake of the Bondi Beach massacre.
Talik and Itzik Gvili will be accompanied by Joseph Waks, founder and director of Hayeladim Shelanu (“Our Children”), an organization founded in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack to support families in Israel who have lost loved ones to war and terrorism, a spokesperson for the NGO said on Monday.
They are coming to Australia “to comfort and to be comforted,” Hayeladim Shelanu said.
They will meet with Jewish communities in Melbourne and Sydney to share their son’s story of heroism and sacrifice and to strengthen the bond between Australian Jewry and bereaved families in Israel.
The charity said the Gvilis’s presence carries particular meaning following the trauma of the Bondi Beach mass shooting at a Chanukah candle-lighting event on Dec. 14, which deeply impacted Jewish families across Australia and beyond.
A major community gathering will be held at St. Kilda Shule in Melbourne on Feb. 22, followed by an event at the Central Synagogue in Sydney on Feb. 25, the organization’s spokesperson said.
The Gvilises are expected to return on March 2.
Hayeladim Shelanu supports bereaved families across Israel through direct assistance, healing initiatives, and community-building programs.
Ran Gvili, a 24-year-old Israel Police Special Patrol Unit (Yasam) volunteer from Meitar, near Beersheva, fought with extraordinary courage on Oct. 7, 2023.
When the massacre began, he left his house, put on his uniform, and headed out to fight. About 10 days earlier he had broken his shoulder and was waiting for surgery, yet he still chose to join the battle.
During the battle near Kibbutz Alumim, he rescued about 100 people who had fled the Supernova music festival. He killed 14 Hamas terrorists before he was abducted.
A panel of experts ruled in January 2024 that Gvili was no longer alive.
His funeral was held in his hometown on Jan. 28.
The renewed missile fire and interception ended four years of truce between the kingdom and…
The president has previously said passage through the Strait of Hormuz should be free of…
Lawmakers could also seek a vote on whether to authorize or oppose further military action.
The law could strengthen the legal standing of Torah students against claims of inequality before…
President Trump blasted former President Obama's deal with Iran, which gave the regime billions in…
The reality is that Abbas has never been eager to test his popularity at the…