Members of a St. Paul school community are mourning the loss of a former teacher who was killed in the Hamas attack on Israel earlier this month.
Noi Maudi, 29, taught at the Talmud Torah school in St. Paul. He lived in Minnesota for six years before returning to Israel, where he grew up. There, he died in the attack on Oct. 7, family friend and co-worker Rabbi Yosi Gordon said.
He was one of more than 4,000 killed in the past 10 days in what has become the deadliest of five Gaza wars for both sides.
Hamas militants descended upon a large music festival in their initial attack in Israel. A family friend told the Star Tribune that Maudi was at a smaller gathering nearby.
In St. Paul, the whole school fell in love with Maudi, who was wise and gentle, Gordon said.
"He was always asking himself what's the next kind thing I can do for somebody, and then he'd actually do it," Gordon said. "How somebody so good could be murdered so ruthlessly, there is no human explanation."
Maudi, his brother-in-law and a teenage nephew were killed in the attack, according to the family friend. Another brother-in-law was injured.
Maudi was a beloved teacher who taught Hebrew and extracurricular subjects such as technology and gym to kids elementary aged through high school. He was the first person her two children asked about as she started to tell them about what was going on in Israel, said former school board member and St. Paul City Council Member Rebecca Noecker.