Ottawa

Family of Israeli Canadian woman killed by Hamas heartbroken, outraged

Adi Vital-Kaploun, a dual Israeli Canadian citizen with close ties to Ottawa, was sheltering in her home with her two young sons when Hamas militants killed her last weekend, her family says. They're outraged that some media reports say Hamas let her go with her children, when in fact she had been killed and a neighbour was with them.

Adi Vital-Kaploun, 33, saved the lives of her children, husband and father, relatives say

'It's unbelievable,' family member says of death of Israeli Canadian woman in Hamas attack

1 year ago
Duration 2:27
Aaron Smith said his cousin-in-law, Adi Vital-Kaploun 'brought so much light to the world.'

Warning: This story contains distressing details.

In the early moments that Hamas militants were storming onto their communal farm outside of the Gaza Strip last weekend, 33-year-old Adi Vital-Kaploun — a dual Israeli Canadian citizen with close ties to Ottawa — was sheltering in her family's home with her two sons, a four-year-old and a 4½-month-old.

She told her father and her husband to stay where they were, and not to come to them.

It was an act that "certainly saved their lives," said her cousin-in-law, Aaron Smith, in a Thursday morning interview with CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning.

"And however she was able to convince the terrorists that murdered her to take her kids to her neighbour — she saved their lives as well. She's a hero."

Smith said the details, contained in an article published Wednesday in the Globe and Mail, are graphic.

Family friends Moshiko Bengiat and Dina Zaslacksi told the Globe that Vital-Kaploun was shot in front of her children, and that the four-year-old remembers everything. Later, when Hamas militants entered the neighbour's house, they dragged her into the living room and thrust Vital-Kaploun's children at her, asking if she knew them.

Smith told CBC the neighbour and the children were then used as human shields "to convince other friends and family in the kibbutz to come out" of hiding.

A woman holding a baby.
Adi Vital-Kaploun, 33, was a proud dual-citizen of Canada and Israel, the Jewish Federation of Ottawa says. (Facebook)

Chosen as a propaganda tool

The neighbour and children were taken through the Negev Desert toward Gaza Strip and released. Smith said they were "chosen as this propaganda tool" to show Hamas's good will.

Grainy video footage from Hamas shows the neighbour and Vital-Kaploun's two children near a fence close to Gaza, and Hamas fighters walking away from them. Conflicting information from some media outlets described them as a mother and her two children being released by Hamas, or a woman and two children being released.

Vital-Kaploun's family is outraged.

"There's no good will that these murderous terrorists have. That's propaganda," Smith said. "Adi is the mother of those children. Adi is dead.

"The kids went through just unimaginable suffering, but are miraculously with us and are safe with their father.… One of the children was shot, had shrapnel in his leg and shot in the foot. That doesn't sound like people that are trying to save women and children," he said.

LISTEN | Aaron Smith's full interview with Ottawa Morning:

Burial to take place in Israel

Smith said Vital-Kaploun's family in Ottawa and Israel are in constant contact, and that they're "as close as a family can be."

She spent her summers in Ottawa with her cousins and family, attending summer camps and travelling the country — "a normal Canadian life for a lovely Israeli girl," Smith said.

"There's no words to describe how our family's doing. It's just hard. It's unimaginable, the pain and suffering that we're going through and all our people are going through."

Vital-Kaploun will be buried in Israel, but with the Canadian government currently trying to airlift its citizens out, her family in Ottawa don't know how they can attend.

"We all want to be there," Smith told CBC. "We all want to be there always, to be with our family, to be in our own land, to celebrate our Jewishness. Some of us contemplated [going], but it's hard to know if you go there how you get back. It's hard to know how you willingly fly into a war zone. But we're all there with her in spirit and in our minds."

Andrea Freedman, president and CEO of the Jewish Federation of Ottawa, told Ottawa Morning Thursday that what the family is enduring is "absolutely heartbreaking," and that they are one family among 1,300 dealing with the same grief.

WATCH | Jewish federation delivers statement on woman with Ottawa ties killed in Israel:

Ottawa Jewish federation issues statement on Ottawa woman killed in Israel

1 year ago
Duration 7:38
Jewish Federation of Ottawa CEO Andrea Freedman delivers a statement on behalf of the family of a woman who was killed during the conflict in Israel.

Mayor spoke to family

Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe said Wednesday that he had been in touch with a family in the city who'd lost a loved one to the conflict in Israel.

"It breaks my heart to see what's happening there," Sutcliffe told reporters during a scrum at city hall. "My thoughts are with all of the victims and all of the families in Ottawa who have been affected by what's been happening."

'It hits very close to home,' Sutcliffe says of Ottawa family who lost loved one in Israel

1 year ago
Duration 0:43
Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe said he'd spoken with the family of someone who was killed in the Hamas attacks in Israel.

Sutcliffe later posted to X, formerly known as Twitter, that Vital-Kaploun was the granddaughter of longtime ByWard Market shop owner Irving Rivers.

The Irving Rivers store, located at the intersection of York Street and ByWard Market Square, has been in business for more than 70 years.

Two Canadians are confirmed dead, and a third is presumed dead as a result of the conflict, according to Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly.

Global Affairs Canada has not confirmed Vital-Kaploun's identity.

Currently, 4,227 Canadians are registered in Israel with the federal government's registry of Canadians abroad, and another 475 are registered in the Palestinian territories, according to Global Affairs Canada.

Joly's comments came after the Palestinian militant group Hamas staged an attack on Israel last weekend, firing rockets, killing civilians and taking hostages.

The attack prompted Israel to declare war on Hamas with attacks of its own. Israel has also ordered what it has described as a complete siege of Gaza, blocking everything from electricity and fuel to food and water from entering.

With files from CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning