Hamas Killed Ariels Family This Is What He Asked For
Lamplighter | November 29, 2023
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Hamas Killed Ariels Family This Is What He Asked For

Lamplighter | December 31, 2025

This story breaks our hearts and gives us hope at the same time.

It's the story of Ariel Zohar, a 12-year-old boy who lost his entire family in the massacre.

He went for his regular morning jog that day, and while he was out, Hamas terrorists broke into his home and killed his father, Yaniv, his mother, Yasmin, and his two sisters, Techelet and Keshet. Ariel is the only survivor.

His Kibbutz, Nachal Oz, was still under mortar fire when heroic ZAKA volunteers offered to pay one more visit to the family's home. They asked Ariel which item he would like them to bring back.

Ariel Zohar

"Bring my father's tefillin," he responded.

You see, Ariel was two weeks away from turning 13 and becoming bar mitzvah. He received a brand-new pair of tefillin, but he asked for his father's Tefillin instead. His dear father, who was so excited to see him wrapping tefillin for the first time, would not be with him to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah.

The tefillin that Ariel requested were a gift from his grandfather, who had survived the atrocities of the Holocaust and rebuilt his family in the Holy Land.

Ariel lost everything, but not his faith.

His elderly grandfather, who is still alive, told him: “I lost my parents when I was 14. You lost your parents when you were 12. I survived, and you will too!”

The tefillin Ariel requested, passed down from his grandfather, a Holocaust survivor who lost his entire family at a similar age.

This story breaks our hearts and gives us hope at the same time.

It's the story of Ariel Zohar, a 12-year-old boy who lost his entire family in the massacre.

He went for his regular morning jog that day, and while he was out, Hamas terrorists broke into his home and killed his father, Yaniv, his mother, Yasmin, and his two sisters, Techelet and Keshet. Ariel is the only survivor.

His Kibbutz, Nachal Oz, was still under mortar fire when heroic ZAKA volunteers offered to pay one more visit to the family's home. They asked Ariel which item he would like them to bring back.

Ariel Zohar

"Bring my father's tefillin," he responded.

You see, Ariel was two weeks away from turning 13 and becoming bar mitzvah. He received a brand-new pair of tefillin, but he asked for his father's Tefillin instead. His dear father, who was so excited to see him wrapping tefillin for the first time, would not be with him to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah.

The tefillin that Ariel requested were a gift from his grandfather, who had survived the atrocities of the Holocaust and rebuilt his family in the Holy Land.

Ariel lost everything, but not his faith.

His elderly grandfather, who is still alive, told him: “I lost my parents when I was 14. You lost your parents when you were 12. I survived, and you will too!”

The tefillin Ariel requested, passed down from his grandfather, a Holocaust survivor who lost his entire family at a similar age.

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