Photo credit: DiasporaEngager (www.DiasporaEngager.com).

The mother of murdered hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin eulogized her son in front of thousands of mourners at his funeral in Jerusalem on Monday afternoon with the exclamation that he was finally set free.

“OK sweet boy, go now on your journey. I hope it’s as good as the trips you dreamed about,” Rachel Goldberg-Polin said, addressing her deceased 23-year-old son, an avid traveler.

Her voice cracking, she added, “Finally, sweet boy, finally, finally, finally, you’re free!”

“One thing I keep thinking about is how out of all the mothers in all the entire world, God chose to give Hersh to me. What must I have done in a past life to deserve such a beautiful gift?” she said.

Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who was born in the United States and moved to Israel at age 7, was abducted on Oct. 7 while at the Nova music festival with his best friend, Aner Shapiro. Shapiro, who fielded three grenades from the roadside bomb shelter the two were hiding in, was one of 1,200 people killed that day by Hamas-led Palestinian terrorists. Apart from Goldberg-Polin, 250 others were kidnapped to Gaza.

Goldberg-Polin’s body was found along with five other hostages over the weekend in a tunnel in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. Hamas terrorists had executed them prior to a raid by Israeli forces.

“Those beautiful six survived together and those beautiful six died together. And now they will be remembered together forever,” Rachel Goldberg-Polin said of her son, Eden Yerushalmi, 24, Ori Danino, 25, Alex Lobanov, 32, Carmel Gat, 40, and Almog Sarusi, 27.

Addressing her son, she went on: “You had lost your arm, and you thought you were dying. And you wrote to us, I’m sorry, because you knew how crushing it would be for us. So you fought to stay alive, and now you are gone.”

“Now I no longer have to worry about you; you are no longer in danger. You are with beautiful Aner. I hope he will show you around,” she added.

Thousands of people gathered at the Har Menuchot cemetery in the fringes of Jerusalem. Many more hundreds lined the streets of the capital city holding Israeli flags as the family accompanied Goldberg-Polin to his final resting place. The funeral was also livestreamed and viewed by 17,000 people.

The eulogies were delivered in near pin-drop silence, broken only by the occasional, heart-wrenching cries from the crowd.

“It’s so hard to be here, but how can you not?” one mourner, Hezi Fried, told The Algemeiner. “I didn’t know him, but I feel like I did. Everyone did.”

The sentiment was echoed in Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s eulogy. “We didn’t know you in life, but you live inside us,” Herzog said.

“Our hearts, already broken, are now shattered into a million pieces,” he said.

Herzog also expressed his regret at the country’s failure to bring the hostages home alive.

“I apologize on behalf of the State of Israel, that we failed to protect you in the terrible disaster of Oct. 7, and that we failed to bring you home safely,” he said.

Herzog compared the “pure barbaric evil” of Hamas to Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who, he said, “taught the world about dignity” and “touched all of humanity deeply.”

Hersh’s father, Jon Goldberg, remarked that the most common refrain he had seen and heard from people since his son’s murder was “sorry.”

“We failed you. We all failed you. You would not have failed you,” he said. “What you would be pushing now is to ensure that your death and the deaths of all the soldiers was not for nothing.”

In her own eulogy, his wife thanked her community and well-wishers around the world who “prayed for us, cooked for us, cared for us when we could not stand up.”

“I’m so thankful to you, and I apologize deeply, but we’re going now to need continued help to get through this sickening new chapter,” she said. “And I’m so sorry to ask because we’ve given you nothing, and you have already given us profoundly and completely for 11 months.”

Mourner Rebecca, who did not know the family, said she felt “crushed with guilt” at Rachel Goldberg-Polin’s words.

“She says that but I don’t feel it’s true; she gave us everything. She was the one who held us all up instead of the other way around,” she said.

In between sobs, she continued, “How can we as a community ever do enough or be strong enough for this amazing family?”

Eden Danino, who traveled from the central Israeli city of Rishon Lezion, said he had made it to three of the hostages’ funerals since Sunday. “It was heartbreaking to be there. We just never, ever thought it would end like this. I was so sure they would come home.”

The murders triggered nationwide protests and general strikes across the country on Sunday evening and throughout Monday, with many demanding a hostage and ceasefire deal to end the war in Hamas-ruled Gaza launched by the Oct. 7 massacre.

Rachel Goldberg-Polin expressed her gratitude to God for the “most stunning honor to be [your] mama.”

“But now my worry shifts to us,” she continued. “How do we live the rest of our life without you? I know you’re right here. I just have to teach myself how to feel you in a different way. One last thing I need you to do for us now. I need you to help us stay strong, to help us survive.”

Source of original article: Israel – Algemeiner.com (www.algemeiner.com).
The content of this article does not necessarily reflect the views or opinion of Global Diaspora News (www.GlobalDiasporaNews.com).

To submit your press release: (https://www.GlobalDiasporaNews.com/pr).

To advertise on Global Diaspora News: (www.GlobalDiasporaNews.com/ads).

Sign up to Global Diaspora News newsletter (https://www.GlobalDiasporaNews.com/newsletter/) to start receiving updates and opportunities directly in your email inbox for free.