Elon Musk visits destroyed kibbutz and meets Netanyahu in wake of antisemitic post

Elon Musk visited Israel Monday, meeting the country’s leaders and walking through a kibbutz destroyed by Hamas last month as he tried to calm outrage caused by his endorsement of an antisemitic post on his social media platform, X.

Musk was taken to Kfar Azza — one of the kibbutzim attacked on October 7 — by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The kibbutz was the home of Abigail Edan, a four-year-old American dual citizen abducted by the militant group that day and released Sunday.

In a live online conversation on X with Netanyahu Monday, Musk agreed with the prime minister that Israel must destroy Hamas.

“Those who are intent on murder must be neutralized. Then the propaganda must stop,” Musk said. “They’re just training people to be murderers.”

He also said Gaza must be made “prosperous.”

“If (all) that happens, I think it will be a good future,” he said. “I’d love to help.”

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) takes Elon Musk (L) on a tour of Kibbutz Kfar Azza. - Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO Handout/Getty Images
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) takes Elon Musk (L) on a tour of Kibbutz Kfar Azza. - Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO Handout/Getty Images

Musk also met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog behind closed doors.

In a readout from the meeting, the president’s office said Herzog urged Musk to address online antisemitism.

“Unfortunately, we are inundated with antisemitism, which is hatred of Jews,” Herzog told Musk, according to the statement. “I think we need to fight this together, because the platforms you lead, unfortunately, have a large reservoir of hatred, hatred of Jews, anti-Semitism.”

Musk met with families of hostages

In an earlier statement, the president’s office said representatives of the families of hostages held by Hamas also joined the meeting, to share “the horrors of the Hamas terror attack, and of the ongoing pain and uncertainty for those held captive.”

Rachel Goldberg was one of the family members who met with Musk on Monday. Goldberg told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “The Lead” Monday that Musk seemed “genuinely concerned and moved” when she showed him the video that captured the moment her 23-year-old son, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, had his arm blown off during the October 7 attacks.

“I think he was really taken aback and he was also very surprised by the fact that this took place while someone was at a music festival,” Goldberg said. “I found him to be a very sympathetic person, clearly shaken and rattled by what he had seen.”

Another parent, the father of a hostage called Omer Shem-Tov, gave Musk a dog-tag inscribed with “Our hearts are hostage in Gaza,” according to an X post by Herzog’s office late on Monday.

Musk put the dog-tag around his neck, a video in the post showed, and later wrote on X: “I will wear it every day until your loved ones are released.”

During the visit to the destroyed kibbutz, Israeli officials described to Musk what had taken place, the Israeli government press office said.