BOULDER, Colo. — For the 611 days since Omri Miran was taken hostage by Hamas, his family has lived in fear, his brother-in-law told those gathered at the Boulder Jewish Festival on Sunday, one week after a man firebombed a group calling for the release of Israeli hostages at the mall where Moshe Lavi now spoke.
''We received only partial, limited and at times horrifying proof of life,'' Lavi said to a hushed crowd. ''We don't know how much he's suffering, deprived of food, water, sunlight, tortured, abused, as I speak to you now.''
The Jewish cultural festival was reimagined this year to highlight the stories of Israeli hostages after police said a man who yelled ''Free Palestine'' threw Molotov cocktails last Sunday at Boulder demonstrators calling for their release. Festival organizers said they wanted the annual event, which is in its 30th year, to focus on healing and center the group's cause — raising awareness of the 55 people believed to still be in captivity in Gaza.
Authorities said 15 people and a dog were victims of the attack at the downtown Pearl Street pedestrian mall. They include eight women and seven men, ranging in age from 25 to 88. One is a Holocaust survivor.
Not all were physically injured, and some are considered victims for the legal case because they were present and could potentially have been hurt.
Run for Their Lives, the group targeted in the attack, started in October 2023 after Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip stormed into Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 others hostage. The Boulder chapter, one of 230 worldwide, walks at the mall every weekend for 18 minutes, the numerical value of the Hebrew word ''chai,'' which means ''life.''
Several hundred people joined the Sunday walk that typically draws only a couple dozen. Colorado Sen. John Hickenlooper was among the participants. Demonstrators held signs that read ''End Jew Hatred'' and handed out stickers stamped with ''611," representing the 611 days since the first Israeli hostages were taken by Hamas militants.
On a stage near the site of the attack, hundreds gathered to listen to speakers and songs. Vendors sold traditional Jewish and Israeli cuisine. In tents marked ''Hostage Square,'' rows of chairs sat empty save for photos of the hostages and the exhortation ''Bring them home now!''