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Family and friends recall dedication of World Central Kitchen aid workers killed in Gaza

Hands wearing gloves hold bloodstained British, Polish and Australian passports.
A man displays bloodstained British, Polish and Australian passports after Israeli airstrikes in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip, killed seven aid workers.
(Abdel Kareem Hana / Associated Press)
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Israeli airstrikes that killed seven aid workers in Gaza reverberated around the world, as friends and relatives mourned the losses of those who were delivering food to besieged Palestinians with the charity World Central Kitchen.

Killed were three British nationals, an Australian, a Polish national, an American-Canadian dual citizen and a Palestinian from Gaza. Some had traveled the world, participating in aid efforts in the aftermath of wars, earthquakes and wildfires.

A vehicle with the logo of the World Central Kitchen damaged in an airstrike.
Palestinians inspect a vehicle with the logo of the World Central Kitchen after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip.
(Ismael abu Dayyah / Associated Press)

Here’s some information on those killed:

Saif abu Taha

Saif abu Taha, 25, had worked for World Central Kitchen as a driver and interpreter since the beginning of the year, relatives said.

His brothers described him as a dedicated young man eager to help fellow Palestinians.

He’d also been a successful businessman who conducted trade with Ukraine, Egypt, China and others, his brother Abdul Razzaq abu Taha said. His work made him known on the Israeli side, his brother added, which helped in coordination and approval to assist the World Central Kitchen team in unloading the ship.

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Saif had hoped to get married. “My mother was looking for a wife for him,” Abdul Razzaq abu Taha said. “He was supposed to get married if the war didn’t happen.”

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Saif and other workers were excited about unloading the food aid, desperately needed in Gaza. The last time he and his brother spoke, he said, they’d finished the job and Saif was heading home.

After hearing about the airstrikes, Abdul Razzaq abu Taha said that he tried to call to see whether his brother was OK.

After many attempts, he said, a stranger answered. “I found this phone about 200 meters away from the car,” the stranger told him. “All of the people inside are killed.”

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Lalzawmi ‘Zomi’ Frankcom

Friends and family remembered Lalzawmi “Zomi” Frankcom, 43, as a brave, selfless woman whose care for others drew her across the globe. For the last five years, she’d worked for Washington-based World Central Kitchen, taking her to the U.S., Thailand and her native Australia.

“We mourn this fine Australian who has a record of helping out her fellow citizens, whether it be internationally or whether it be through the support that she gave during the bushfires that occurred during that Black Summer,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. “She is someone who clearly was concerned about her fellow humanity.”

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In a statement, relatives described Frankcom as an “outstanding human being” who was “killed doing the work she loves delivering food to the people of Gaza.”

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She was born in Melbourne and earned a bachelor’s from the Swinburne University of Technology. For eight years, she worked for the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the nation’s largest bank.

Frankcom’s social media highlighted visits to help those in need in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Romania and Haiti.

World Central Kitchen colleague Dora Weekley, who met Frankcom responding to Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas in 2019, described her as “larger than life.”

She recalled when Frankcom was invited to walk a Hollywood red carpet, for a documentary about World Central Kitchen that was nominated for an Emmy.

“I remember getting a picture of her in a dress, saying, ‘Hold onto this forever,’” Weekley told ABC. “Because usually I’m in sweats and runners, and I’m in Pakistan or Afghanistan or, you know, she could be anywhere, and never with her hair done or makeup done.

“She worked all hours, she gave everything, and she believed in helping people who were less fortunate.”

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Damian Sobol

Damian Sobol, 35, was known as a cheerful, friendly and resourceful manager who quickly rose in World Central Kitchen’s ranks.

Hailing from the southeastern Polish city of Przemysl and studying hospitality there, Sobol had been on aid missions in Ukraine, Morocco, Turkey and, for the last six months, Gaza.

”He was a really extraordinary guy,” said Marta Wilczynska, of the Free Place Foundation, which cooperates with World Central Kitchen. “We were very proud of him.”

Wilczynska met Sobol on the Polish side of the border with Ukraine, a few days after Russia’s February 2022 invasion. He spoke English well and was a translator, and as a manager he could organize work in any condition, she said.

“Always smiling, always so helpful, he loved this job. I felt I had a brother in him,” Wilczynska said.

Free Place Foundation President Mikolaj Rykowski said Soból was “the man for every task — he could overcome every difficulty.”

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Posting on Facebook, Przemysl Mayor Wojciech Bakun said of Sobol’s death that there are “no words to describe how people who knew this fantastic young man feel now.”

John Chapman, James Henderson and James Kirby

The three British victims were military veterans who had been in dangerous situations before. They died providing security for the World Central Kitchen aid mission.

Kirby, 47, came from the port city of Bristol in southwest England and served in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Afghanistan with the British army before moving into private security work. According to his LinkedIn profile, he worked as a players’ escort at the 2021 Wimbledon tennis tournament.

Kirby’s cousin Amy Roxburgh-Barry called him an “all-round gentleman” who was planning to give his mother and aunt a surprise cruise after he returned from the Gaza Strip.

“It’s just devastating that he’s fought in these wars and come home with not a scratch, and then he goes out to do something helpful, and that’s what happens,” she told Sky News.

Chapman, 57, was a Royal Marines veteran whose family said in a statement that they were devastated to lose him.

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“He died trying to help people and was subject to an inhumane act,” they said. “He was an incredible father, husband, son and brother.”

Henderson, who was 33 and known as Jim, was a former Royal Marine from Cornwall in southwest England, news outlets there reported. Sky News reported that he was due to leave Gaza on Monday, the day he was killed.

Jacob Flickinger

Jacob Flickinger was a 33-year-old dual citizen of the United States and veteran of the Canadian Armed Forces.

He served for more than 10 years and was deployed to Afghanistan, the military said in a statement.

A GoFundMe page raising money to help his family said he had a partner and 1-year-old son at home.

“Jacob was a great human being, he was a great soldier, he had a wonderful heart,” his mother, Sylvie Labrecque, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. “He was very much involved with strong intensity in whatever he was doing in life, and he believed very strongly that the work he was doing was important, especially in this case with starvation out there.”

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In Acapulco, restaurants posted on social media that Flickinger was among workers who brought relief to their neighborhoods last fall after Hurricane Otis slammed the Pacific coast.

Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly called for a full investigation and said in a post on X that strikes on humanitarian personnel were “absolutely unacceptable.”

Speaking Wednesday in Brussels before a North Atlantic Treaty Organization meeting, she repeated the call for an investigation and said she had reached out to the Israeli foreign minister.

“Israel needs to respect humanitarian law, and we will make sure that is the case,” she said.

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