It's difficult to respond to the death of someone you never met. Though I feel I have come to know Oded Lifshitz, in the 16 months I have been representing his amazing daughter
@Lifschitz_sha who has been campaigning for his release.
Shortly after 7th October 2023, I received a message from Sharone's MP,
@stellacreasy, asking whether I could help Sharone, who is a British citizen and lives in London, as both of her elderly parents have been taken hostage (Stella has been a huge comfort to Sharone throughout the past 16 months).
Within a few hours I was working with Adam Rose on what could be done. Our first (ultimately unsuccessful - longer story) gambit was to try and convince the UK government to give Oded and Yocheved, and one other, and then more, UK citizenship.
Overnight, I researched Oded's life - looking for sympathetic facts to add to the application. It didn't take long to find them.
Oded was older than the State of Israel itself, having been born in the British Mandate of Palestine. In fact, I spent about 12 hours trying to understand whether his early British subject status could help - I concluded it couldn't.
But I was amazed to find out about how he had spent his life since. This is what I wrote in my submission:
"Oded was born in Haifa, which was under British Mandate rule, on the 11th of May 1940. His parents arrived there from Poland in 1933. Oded was a founding member of kibbutz Nir Oz and lived there since it was founded in 1955. He is a journalist. He worked for decades for peace and the recognition of Palestinian rights, including in his work for newspaper Al-Hamishmar, and in the past decades and till today he continued to write in the local press and published opinion articles in Haaretz newspaper. He spends his retirement driving Palestinian patients from the border checkpoint to receive medical treatment to Israeli hospitals, working with the volunteer led organisation Road to Recovery."
This is only a snapshot, of course - every life is a world in itself. We don't know when or how Oded died, but we do know how he lived. And I have no doubt that the strength, determination, humanity and dignity which I have had the privilege to see up close in his daughter Sharone, who has campaigned relentlessly and with the utmost humanity, is a tribute to the values Oded and Yocheved brought her and her family up with, and also the values which surely are the only model for this terrible conflict ultimately being resolved.
The other photo is of a yellow cactus pin badge which Sharone gave me - it represents the cactus patch on Kibbutz Nir Oz which Oded tended, and I will always cherish it. I am just so sorry that he will never come home to his family, and his cactus garden. Adam Rose and I will each be buying a cactus to tend in Oded's memory.
May his memory be a blessing.