Community stands large against hate at wall display rededication

On Sunday afternoon, scores of residents—police estimate almost 2,000 people—gathered on Homer Street to re-dedicate a display honoring Israelis taken hostage by Hamas exactly six months earlier.

The display had been defaced in one of many reported hate crimes aimed at people displaying signs supporting Israel since the Hamas attack of Oct. 7 and Israel’s subsequent military action in Gaza.

The homeowners, Jeff and Miriam Kosowsky, decided to fight back by hosting an unveiling of the newly fixed wall display and a rally against antisemitism.

“With your help, we will amplify awareness of each hostage thousand-fold, both today and going forward” Jeff Kosowsky said.

The event featured Jewish prayer and speakers including Mayor Ruthanne Fuller and U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Newton.

Nearly 2,000 people showed up to rededicate a wall display honoring Israeli hostages Sunday, April 7. Photo by Bryan McGonigle

Fuller emphasized the need to call out what she called “a pure act of hate.”

“We have to keep repeating that, because we are seeing an explosion of antisemitism across the globe, across the commonwealth and across Newton,” Fuller said. “We will not tolerate this here in Newton or anywhere else.”

Newton police have reported an uptick in hate crimes in recent months, particularly hate crimes that are antisemitic and anti-Israel in nature.

“We proclaim with one voice that antisemitism and the delegitimization of Israel have no pace in our community,” Auchincloss said. “We stand together against the depravity of Hamas, holding innocent men, women and children hostage for six brutal months. We proclaim with one voice that the hostages must be returned immediately and unconditionally. And we stand together against the ominous echoes of history.”

U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Newton, speaks at a rally against antisemitism on Sunday, April 7. Photo by Bryan McGonigle

Children lined up and read the names and ages of each hostage as well as something about the hostage that made them unique, as they peeled back black paper and revealed the hostages’ faces.

Boston University student Ben Spira spoke about his friend, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who is among those held hostage in Gaza.

Spira told a story about a time Hersh discovered a fully operating bar in a kibbutz bomb shelter. He talked about Hersh’s kindness and caring nature and his passion for travel.

Spira said he was in shock and denial when he first heard Hersh was taken hostage. He heard Hersh had lost an arm throwing grenades back at the attackers, ironically in a bomb shelter, but that has not been confirmed.

“If that doesn’t say something about the type of hero that Hersh is, I don’t know what does,” Spira said.

Below are more photos and videos from Sunday’s event.

A wall display showing the hostages taken from Israel by Hamas was recently rebuilt after being vandalized. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
Mayor Ruthanne Fuller speaks at a rally against antisemitism on Sunday, April 7. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
Ben Spira of West Newton speaks about his friend Hersh, who was taken hostage in Israel on Oct. 7. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
Jeff and Miriam Kosowsky, whose wall display honoring hostages taken from Israeli was vandalized, held a rededication for the newly repaired display on Sunday. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-Newton, speaks at a rally against antisemitism on Sunday, April 7. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
Miriam Kosowsky, whose display honoring hostages taken from Israel, speaks at a rally against antisemitism she and her husband, Jeff, organized in response to a rise in hate crimes in Newton. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
Newton City Councilor Rick Lipof attends the rededication of an Israeli hostages display on Sunday, April 7. Photo by Bryan McGonigle
Newton Police Chief John Carmichael Jr. with the newest member of the department, Aoife. Photo by Bryan McGonigle