Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday participated in a cornerstone laying ceremony at Mount Herzl military cemetery in Jerusalem for a memorial hall honoring victims of terrorism.

“Even if there are among us differences of opinion and outlook, before anything else, we are brothers and sisters,” the premier said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, April 19, 2023. Photo by Haim Zach/GPO.

The memorial will span 172 years of hostile acts with the first terror victim recognized by the State of Israel as Rabbi Avraham Shlomo Zalman Tzoref, who was murdered in Jerusalem’s Old City in 1851 while trying to rebuild the Hurva Synagogue. The latest victim is Lucy Dee, who was fatally wounded in a terrorist attack in the Jordan Valley on April 7 that also killed her daughters Maya and Rina.

More than 28,000 casualties of terrorism and war are recognized by the State of Israel—over 24,000 fallen soldiers from war and over 4,000 civilians in terrorist attacks.

“The question of our existence was once in doubt; today it is not, even though the price is high. Your loved ones are torn from you, and then the pain and the longing do not relent. Family after family, one after another, experiences the void at home. Family after family has its memories, but here we intend to gather all the memories in one hall.”

The ceremony was conducted by Rachel and Avraham Fraenkel, the parents of Naftali Fraenkel, who was murdered by Hamas terrorists in 2014 along with fellow teenagers Gil-Ad Sha’ar and Eyal Yifrach, triggering the Operation Protective Edge war against the terrorists in the Gaza Strip.

Also in attendance at Mount Herzl were Welfare and Social Affairs Minister Ya’akov Margi, Labor Minister Yoav Ben-Tzur, the prime minister’s chief of staff Tzachi Braverman, Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion, Victims of Terrorism Organization Chairman Abie Moses and bereaved families.

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