Teenager, volunteer medic among dead in Beit Shemesh strike

March 2, 2026 by Pesach Benson
Read on for article

Israeli authorities released the names of four of the nine people killed when an Iranian ballistic missile struck a residential neighbourhood in the central city of Beit Shemesh, in what officials described as the deadliest single missile strike inside Israel since the outbreak of the current conflict with Iran.

Emergency crews in Beit Shemesh carry a body from the rubble of building that was directly hit by an Iranian missile on March 1, 2026. Nine people were killed and dozens injured. Photo by Yoav Dudkevitch/TPS-IL

The attack brought the death toll in Israel to 11 since the war began on Saturday.

The victims identified were Gabriel Baruch Revach, 16; Oren Katz; Sara Elimelech; and her daughter, Ronit Elimelech. Rescue teams continued searching through the rubble for six people believed to be trapped and not yet contacted, hours after the strike.

According to emergency services and security officials, the missile scored a direct hit on a synagogue, causing it to collapse and heavily damaging a public bomb shelter located beneath the building, as well as nearby homes. Forty-eight people were injured in the attack, including three in serious condition and three moderately wounded. The remaining victims suffered light injuries and were evacuated to hospitals in Jerusalem and central Israel.

YouTube player

“This was a direct impact by a heavy ballistic missile,” a senior defence official said. “Air defence systems were activated, but the interceptor apparently failed. The incident is under investigation by the Israeli Air Force.”

The Israel Defence Forces said rescue and recovery units from the Home Front Command, along with large medical teams and air evacuation helicopters, were deployed at the scene within minutes.

Among those killed were Sara Elimelech and her 45-year-old daughter Ronit, a volunteer medic with the United Hatzalah emergency organisation. Ronit had been visiting her parents with her three children when sirens sounded, prompting the family to enter the public shelter beneath the synagogue. Two of her children were pulled alive from the debris and hospitalised with light to moderate injuries. A third child was unharmed, and Sara Elimelech’s husband was also rescued.

“Ronit joined United Hatzalah after her young son asked her to volunteer as his birthday gift,” said Eli Beer, the organisation’s president. “I met them personally, and they hold a very special place in our hearts. Itamar was so proud of his mother.”

Oren Katz, another victim identified by the Beit Shemesh municipality, is survived by his wife, children, and a brother. Sixteen-year-old Gabriel Baruch Revach was also killed in the strike. Local media reports said his father had been involved in fundraising for the synagogue that was destroyed.

The Beit Shemesh attack came amid a broader wave of Iranian missile fire targeting central Israel. Late Saturday night, a 32-year-old caregiver, Mary Anne Velasquez de Vera, was killed when a missile directly struck a building in Tel Aviv. De Vera was helping her ward make her way to a shelter. The Home Front Command said that missile, too, was not intercepted.

On Sunday, a 60-year-old woman on her way to a shelter suffered severe shortness of breath before dying.

Since war broke out on Saturday, 777 people have been evacuated to hospitals, Israel’s Health Ministry reported.

Of that number, 86 remain hospitalised, including four in serious condition, 20 in moderate condition, and 58 with mild injuries. Four additional patients are undergoing medical evaluation. Some serious cases were not directly caused by missile strikes.

The ministry urged senior citizens to proceed cautiously when heading to protected areas and called on neighbors to assist elderly residents in reaching shelters safely.

Speak Your Mind

Comments received without a full name will not be considered
Email addresses are NEVER published! All comments are moderated. J-Wire will publish considered comments by people who provide a real name and email address. Comments that are abusive, rude, defamatory or which contain offensive language will not be published

Got something to say about this?

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from J-Wire

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading