
Israel embassy staffers slain in Washington had planned to marry
As their deaths late Wednesday intensify the international spotlight on the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, here is what we know about the two Israeli embassy staffers shot dead after attending a networking event for young professionals.
Yaron Lischinsky
The 30-year-old had worked as a researcher at the Israeli embassy in Washington since 2022.
He was born in Nuremburg, Germany and moved to Israel at the age of 16 and had dual nationality.
Lischinsky studied at Reichman University in Tel Aviv and Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Ron Prosor, the Israeli ambassador in Berlin, described Lischinsky as a "brilliant" and "curious" student when he taught him at Reichman.
Nissim Otmazgin, a humanities professor at Hebrew University, said the slain man had dreamed of becoming a diplomat.
Lischinsky spoke fluent German, according to the German-Israeli Friendship Society. Volker Beck, the society president, said Lischinsky's "interest in German-Israeli relations and ways to achieve peaceful coexistence in the Middle East brightened the environment around him."
He met Sarah Milgrim when she started working at the Israeli mission.
According to Yechiel Leiter, Israel's ambassador in Washington, Lischinsky had bought a ring. The couple planned to fly to Jerusalem on Sunday to meet his family and Lischinsky was to propose there next week.
Sarah Milgrim
The LinkedIn photo of 26-year-old Sarah Milgrim showed a smiling woman with curly red hair standing between Israeli and US flags. She had worked in the public diplomacy section at the embassy in Washington since 2023.
Milgrim was a leading choir member at her school near Kansas City and earned a degree in environmental science from the University of Kansas.
She also attended a American University in Washington and a UN University for Peace program. She had a master's degree in international studies and sustainable global development, according to her father Robert.
The Milgrim family were not aware of the upcoming proposal. Her father said the Israeli ambassador told them about it when he telephoned Wednesday night to inform them of the young couple's death.
Milgrim's mother Nancy told The New York Times she had been planning to fly to Washington on Sunday to look after her daughter's dog.
She had seen alerts on her phone about the shooting in Washington, and tracked her daughter to the Capital Jewish Museum before the ambassador's call.
"I pretty much already knew," the father told The New York Times.
After university Milgrim spent a year in Israel working with the Tech2Peace group aimed at bringing together young Israelis and Palestinians for seminars on peacemaking and tech training.
On LinkedIn, she said she had carried out a study "on the role of friendships in the Israeli-Palestinian peacebuilding process."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
4 hours ago
- France 24
'No Eid' for West Bank Palestinians who lost sons in Israeli raids
The Israeli army has conducted a months-long operation in the camp which has forced Ghazzawi, along with thousands of other residents, from her home. For Ghazzawi, the few precious minutes she spent at her sons' graves still felt like a small victory. "On the last Eid (Eid al-Fitr, celebrating the end of Ramadan in March), they raided us. They even shot at us. But this Eid, there was no shooting, just that they kicked us out of the cemetery twice", the 48-year-old told AFP. "We were able to visit our land, clean up around the graves, and pour rosewater and cologne on them", she added. Eid al-Adha, which begins on Friday, is one of the biggest holidays in the Muslim calendar. According to Muslim tradition, it commemorates the sacrifice Ibrahim (known to Christians and Jews as Abraham) was about to make by killing his son, before the angel Gabriel intervened and offered him a sheep to sacrifice instead. As part of the celebrations, families traditionally visit the graves of their loved ones. In the Jenin camp cemetery, women and men had brought flowers for their deceased relatives, and many sat on the side of their loved ones' graves as they remembered the dead, clearing away weeds and dust. An armoured car arrived at the site shortly after, unloading soldiers to clear the cemetery of its mourners who walked away solemnly without protest. Ghazzawi's two sons, Mohammad and Basel, were killed in January 2024 in a Jenin hospital by undercover Israeli troops. The Palestinian Islamic Jihad militant group claimed the two brothers as its fighters after their deaths. Like Ghazzawi, many in Jenin mourned sons killed during one of the numerous Israeli operations that have targeted the city, a known bastion of Palestinian armed groups fighting Israel. -'There is no Eid'- In the current months-long military operation in the north of the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, Israeli forces looking for militants have cleared three refugee camps and deployed tanks in Jenin. Mohammad Abu Hjab, 51, went to the cemetery on the other side of the city to visit the grave of his son, killed in January by an Israeli strike that also killed five other people. "There is no Eid. I lost my son -- how can it be Eid for me?" he asked as he stood by the six small gravestones of the dead young men. The Israeli military did not offer details at the time but said it had carried out "an attack in the Jenin area". "There's no accountability, no oversight", lamented Abu Hjab. "One of the victims (of the strike) was just a kid, born in 2008 -— so he was only 16 years old." "I still have three other children. I live 24 hours a day with no peace of mind", he added, referring to the army's continued presence in Jenin. All around him, families sat or stood around graves at Jenin's eastern neighbourhood cemetery, which they visited after the early morning Eid prayer at the city's nearby Great Mosque. The mosque's imam led a prayer at the cemetery for those killed in Gaza and for the community's dead, particularly those killed by the Israeli army. Hamam al-Sadi, 31, told AFP he has visited the cemetery at every religious holiday since his brother was killed in a strike, to "just sit with him." -'Our only hope'- Several graves marked "martyr" -- a term broadly applied to Palestinian civilians and militants killed by Israel -- were decorated with photos of young men holding weapons. Mohammad Hazhouzi, 61, lost a son during a military raid in November 2024. He has also been unemployed since Israel stopped giving work permits to West Bank residents after the Gaza war erupted. Despite the army's continued presence in Jenin, Hazhouzi harboured hope. "They've been there for months. But every occupation eventually comes to an end, no matter how long it lasts". "God willing, we will achieve our goal of establishing our Palestinian state. That's our only hope," he said. "Be optimistic, and good things will come".


France 24
6 hours ago
- France 24
Three Serbs charged over paint attack on France's Jewish sites, Russian involvement suspected
A French judge has charged three Serbs with vandalising Jewish sites with paint over the weekend "to serve the interests of a foreign power", a judicial source said Friday. A source close to the case said investigators suspect Russia is behind the attacks for which the men were charged on Thursday evening. They had exchanged messages on Telegram with other individuals not yet apprehended, it added. France 's Holocaust memorial, three Paris synagogues and a restaurant were vandalised with paint in the night of Friday to Saturday, in what the Israeli embassy denounced as a "co-ordinated anti-Semitic attack". The source following the case described the three suspects, two born in 1995 and one born in 2003, as having completed a task motivated by financial compensation, but without being aware of any geopolitical implications. They were two brothers and a third person who had lived in France for several years, the source said. They were arrested on Monday in southeast France as they tried to leave the country. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said he was "deeply disgusted by these heinous acts targeting the Jewish community". Israeli's President Isaac Herzog said Saturday he was "dismayed" by the Paris vandalism, noting that his great-grandfather had been a rabbi at one of the synagogues. In the run-up to the Summer Olympics in Paris last year, several high-profile stunts intended to influence French public opinion led French officials to point the finger at Moscow. They included red hands tagged on Paris's main Holocaust memorial in May 2024. In October 2023, soon after the Palestinian militant attack on Israel that sparked the latest Gaza war, stars of David were tagged on buildings in the Paris region, with two Moldovans suspected of working for the Russian FSB security service later arrested. Russia has previously denied any involvement in any of the plots attributed to it by French officials.


Local France
7 hours ago
- Local France
Three Serbs charged over paint attack on France Jewish sites
A source close to the case said investigators suspect Russia is behind the attacks for which the men were charged on Thursday evening. They had exchanged messages on Telegram with other individuals not yet apprehended, it added. France's Holocaust memorial, three Paris synagogues and a restaurant were vandalised with paint in the night of Friday to Saturday, in what the Israeli embassy denounced as a "coordinated anti-Semitic attack". Advertisement The source following the case described the three suspects, two born in 1995 and one born in 2003, as having completed a task motivated by financial compensation, but without being aware of any geopolitical implications. READ ALSO How much of a threat is Russian interference and disinformation in France? They were two brothers and a third person who had lived in France for several years, the source said. They were arrested on Monday in southeast France as they tried to leave the country. French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau said he was "deeply disgusted by these heinous acts targeting the Jewish community". Israeli's President Isaac Herzog said Saturday he was "dismayed" by the Paris vandalism, noting that his great-grandfather had been a rabbi at one of the synagogues. In the run-up to the Summer Olympics in Paris last year, several high-profile stunts intended to influence French public opinion led French officials to point the finger at Moscow. They included red hands tagged on Paris's main Holocaust memorial in May 2024. In October 2023, soon after the Palestinian militant attack on Israel that sparked the latest Gaza war, stars of David were tagged on buildings in the Paris region, with two Moldovans suspected of working for the Russian FSB security service later arrested. Russia has previously denied any involvement in any of the plots attributed to it by French officials.