Rabbi Elchanan Danino, the father of slain hostage Ori Danino tells the crowd at a rally in Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square that he came to “be the voice of 101 hostages and their families,” and to appeal for unity among the public.
He also addresses a leaked conversation in which he castigated Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the “Singing for their Return” event organized by the Hostage Families Forum at which he is speaking.
“I came here today after a crazed day,” says Danino. “Parts of the media turned my words to hurt someone, heaven forbid. That was not my intent.”
In the footage, from Netanyahu’s condolence visit to the family, Danino accused the premier of building up Hamas to the point where it murdered his son.
In his speech, Danino doesn’t mention Netanyahu by name.
“I came here today to be the voice of 101 hostages and their families,” he says. “I no longer have the privilege to stand idly by, but I also, unfortunately, no longer have what to gain.”
He explains that he had refrained from public appearances until now because his son, a soldier with the Paratrooper’s 202nd Battalion was kidnapped while on active duty.
Danino speaks about the cultural divide straddled by his son, who joined the army after studying in an ultra-Orthodox yeshiva in Jerusalem.
“The wavelength I tried to broadcast to those who spoke with me during the condolences, including the — unfortunately — well-known conversation, is that whoever saw Ori’s funeral and the shiva {the 7-day Jewish mourning period} understood a bit about us and what we teach and strive for,” said Danino, noting that he himself had served in the army, and that his wife did national service, but neither of them left the ultra-Orthodox fold.
Appealing for unity, Danino says that the fringes of society must not be allowed to divide the “mostly connected, loving, and united” public.
“All of Israel are brothers. We may wear different clothes, but we all came from the same father and the same mother,” he says. “Let us not allow anyone to divide us.”
Still refraining from referring to Netanyahu by name, Danino appeals to the country’s leaders.
“You sit there each day and manage many things, but saving lives comes above all else,” he says. “The lives of dozens of our best sons and daughters depend on you. Please don’t miss any slim chance there is to bring everyone home immediately.”
The self-consciously apolitical Singing for their Return event, held every Tuesday, has drawn a 300-strong crowd, which is notably younger, more religious and more staid than the anti-government, pro-hostage deal protest — also organized by the Hostages Families Forum — two blocks away on Begin Street.
Times of Israel Staff contributed to this report.