At the UN, a call to recognize Oct. 7 victims of rape
Rallygoers said that far too many have ignored or excused Hamas’ rape of women and girls in Israel

Graphic by Angelie Zaslavsky
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and tech executive Sheryl Sandberg addressed a special session at the United Nations Monday to raise awareness of Hamas’ sexual violence on Oct. 7, along with former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and first responders from Israel, who addressed the session in videos.
“You can’t unsee once you see those images,” said Gillibrand, a New York Democrat, of the evidence of Hamas’ massacres.
Before the session, about 300 pro-Israel protesters gathered outside the U.N. building to demand justice for victims of sexual violence during the terrorist attacks. “Me too, unless you’re a Jew” and “rape is rape,” they chanted, and held posters that read: “UNbereable silence,” and “UNbelievable, UNacceptable, UNbearable.”
Critics have blasted UN Women — a branch of the body that advocates for gender equality — for waiting eight weeks until, under pressure, it condemned Hamas’ attack on Israel, in which the militants killed 1,200 and kidnapped 240. Strong evidence of sexual violence was also found, including in videos taken by Hamas militants themselves.
“You’re not a feminist if you have to be convinced that raping Israeli women is wrong,” Sheila Katz, CEO of National Council of Jewish Women, said at the rally. “Rape is not resistance. Rape is never excusable. You’re either against all rapes or you support it.”

She and Gilad Erdan, Israel’s ambassador to the U.N., also criticized UN Women during the special session, convened by Israel’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations, with the World Zionist Organization and the National Council of Jewish Women.
“These brutal sexual abuses were premeditated and instructed. I sent two letters with photos as evidence to UN Women, but we’ve been ignored,” Erdan said. “If the U.N. chooses to remain silent, this does not mean the world will. The stories of Israeli women won’t be silenced and truth will prevail.”
The U.N. session, called “Hear Our Voices,” was attended by about 700 mostly female activists and founders of Israeli and international women rights groups.
Via video, first responders and police officers detailed what they saw on Oct. 7 and in the days following the Hamas attack. Shari Greenwald Mendes, an architect from New Jersey who moved to Israel in 2011 and founded a women’s organization in Jerusalem, said the bodies of many women raped and killed on Oct. 7 were almost unrecognizable.
And an Israeli national police officer, among the first witnesses to the devastation at a kibbutz attacked by Hamas, told the gathering, “My life as a police officer, as a woman, as a mother, will never be the same after Oct. 7.”
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