I firmly believe that Hamas took out the best of us. They targeted the kibbutzim close to Gaza, where peace activist Vivian Silver lived, where human angels like Jimmy Pacheco and Angelyn Aguirre worked, and where Shoshan Haran and her family came from.
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Dr. Shoshan Haran, 67, comes from a family of highly educated, highly driven lifesavers. Her grandparents were orthopedic surgeons in Stuttgart, Germany, before the Second World War. They came to Israel to escape Hitler’s reign of terror and continued their work in the new country: they treated children with polio and severe injuries in the Alyn Hospital for disabled children. Their son, Avraham Havron, left the relatively wealthy and comfortable home of his parents in Jerusalem to help to establish the agricultural community of kibbutz Be’eri.
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Abraham Havron’s children, Shoshan, Lilach and Aviv, were born and raised in kibbutz Be’eri. Shoshan married Avshalom Haran. The couple lived in Be’eri and had 3 children together: Adi, Yuval and Shaked. These names will all come back later in this story.
Shoshan studied biology and plant protection in Jerusalem and started working at Hazera Genetics, a leading seed producing company. But after years of working in the seed industry, Shoshan wanted to use her knowledge to help people. She founded the non-profit organization Fair Planet, which develops high quality seeds specifically for African farmers. The NGO operates in Ethiopia, Tanzania and Rwanda and has helped thousands of farmers achieve much more successful harvests than before. This way, not only has Fair Planet improved the lives of the farmers themselves, but also the lives of hundreds of thousands of people who now have food to eat, instead of failed harvests and hunger.
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Shoshan travelled to Africa several times a year. Her father, Avraham, was so proud of her work that, at 91 years old, he decided to come with her on one of her field trips. Avraham Havron passed away at the age of 96 in 2022. It is a blessing that he did not have to live through the horror of October 7, 2023.
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Over the years, their succes grew. Some of the biggest seed companies in the world, like Bayer and Syngenta, started funding Fair Planet, because they are developing the African market, which is profitable for them. The NGO doesn’t only provide the farmers with seeds, but also with education and practical help from volunteers. With the assistance of this project, the farmers are able to produce up to six times more vegetables of better quality than before, which has a huge effect on entire communities. It is fair to say that Shoshan Haran’s work changed millions of lives for the better. How many of us can say that?
Of course, Hamas does not ask people what good they have done in the world. The terrorists, crazed and bloodthirsty, hopped up on a cocktail of drugs, didn’t care about anything or anyone. On October 7, kibbutz Be’eri was raided and destroyed by hundreds of inhuman demons from hell. Murdering, torturing, burning. Screaming about the greatness of their cruel god. The Death Eaters of our world, full of hate, sadism and cocaine. I cannot imagine anything more terrifying than that.
Shoshan’s husband, Avshalom Haran, was murdered in cold blood. So were her sister, Lilach Kipnis, her husband, Eviatar Kipnis, and Eviatar’s caretaker, Paul Vincent Castelvi. And Shoshan was abducted, together with six other members of her family: her daughter Adi Shoham, Adi’s husband Tal Shoham, their children Yahel (3) and Naveh (8), Avshalom’s sister Sharon Avigdori and her daughter Noam. Eleven members of the same family (including Paul) were missing or dead. Try to imagine it. I can’t. My brain just refuses to wrap itself around this idea.
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Shoshan and Lilach’s brother, Aviv Havron, found a blackened ruin where his sister’s house once stood. It had been blown up with explosives by the terrorists.
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For seven long weeks, Shoshan and her family members were hostages, hidden underground in the tunnels system of Gaza. They were kept in the dark, with very little food or water. They could not wash or brush their teeth. They had to stay quiet and speak in whispers. They were threatened, verbally and with weapons. Shoshan was the one who kept them all together, who told them to stay positive, that they would get out. And they did, on November 26. In Gazan clothes, accompanied by hooded, armed terrorists, who handed them over to the Red Cross. Finally, Shoshan’s brother and her two other children could hug her again. Yahel and Naveh could play again. They could eat and shower.
But not all of them. Tal Shoham, the children’s father, was not released. As I am writing this, on the last day of 2023, he is still imprisoned in Gaza. And Shoshan had to be told about the murder of her husband and sister. She didn’t know, she thought they had also been kidnapped. Like so many others, this family has been torn apart by the horrible crimes of Hamas on October 7.
But Shoshan Haran will come back from this, and she will continue her work at Fair Planet and save countless lives. Because that is who she is: the best of us.
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