By SUNIL Sonkar
JERUSALEM: Baby Moshe, who lost his parents in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attck at Nariman House, still thinks of Mumbai as home after turning 3 on Friday. He believes his parents live there and he also often asks about them. Moshe’s little world is his school and play, climbing and falling, drawing and colouring at present. Now the terror and bullets does not have meaning to him. Yes, not yet.

His life is just like of any normal three-year-old kid, comfortable, secure and also engulfed by love. As he will grow older the horrific tragedy of 26/11 could haunt him.
He lost his father and mother in the 26/11 terror attacks last year. He had stood crying near to his parents’ fallen bodies.
It is a miracle that Moshe is alive. His devoted Indian nanny, Sandra Samuel, after hearing his cries ran to him, scooped him up and hid him in the kitchen until the nightmare was over.
Both of them sat wedged in the gap between the fridge and the wall. The bravery of Sandra became the stuff of legend in the Jewish community every where in the world.