Israeli boy who survived 2008 attacks returns to Mumbai

Published January 16, 2018
Moshe Holtzberg (C), son of slain US Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg who was killed along with his wife in the November 26, 2008 attacks, reacts as he arrives with his grandparents at the Nariman (Chabad) house in Mumbai. ─ AFP
Moshe Holtzberg (C), son of slain US Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg who was killed along with his wife in the November 26, 2008 attacks, reacts as he arrives with his grandparents at the Nariman (Chabad) house in Mumbai. ─ AFP

An 11-year-old Israeli boy who survived the Mumbai terror attacks almost a decade ago returned for the first time Tuesday to the house where his parents were killed.

Moshe Holtzberg was two years old when militants stormed Chabad House on November 26, 2008, killing six people, including Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg, who ran the Jewish centre.

The assault was part of a series of coordinated attacks across the Indian city, including on its main train station, that lasted three days and left 166 people dead.

Moshe was saved by his Indian nanny, Sandra Samuel, who managed to escape. He now lives in Israel with his grandparents.

On Tuesday, Moshe made his first visit to Mumbai since the tragedy.

Samuel held his hand as the pair, along with Moshe's grandfather, battled their way through reporters at Mumbai's airport after touching down around 8:30 am.

“I'm very happy,” a rather startled looking Moshe told reporters in Hindi.

He was later taken to Chabad House in south Mumbai where on Thursday he will join Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the unveiling of a memorial to the victims of the 26/11 attacks.

Ahead of Moshe's visit, Israel Kozlovsky, the centre's rabbi, told AFP that it would be a very emotional occasion.

“This is the place where he got his last hug from his father and mother,” he said.

Samuel has said she found Moshe standing crying over the bodies of his parents and grabbed him before fleeing the house to safety. She also lives in Israel now.

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