With friendship forged as children, Chicago trucker driver remembers his pal still held by Hamas today
For the last five months, Chicago native Jeremiah Smith, 28, has been driving a truck around major U.S. cities and college campuses with a picture of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, 24, and other hostages who were abducted in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023 by Hamas terrorists.
This week, he's circling through the Windy City as the Democratic National Convention (DNC) takes place.
Smith’s mission to remind others about the hostages' plight is deeply personal to him.
Goldberg-Polin was like a "little brother" to him, Smith told Fox News Digital. Goldberg-Polin's grandmother, Marcy Goldberg, rescued Smith from the difficult circumstances of his childhood and introduced him to a new way of life.
This backdrop of outreach, friendship and kindness in America has helped fuel Smith's efforts behind the wheel of a truck, this week and well before.
Jeremiah Smith of Chicago, left, with Leebie Goldberg-Polin, sister of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, at right, who is still being held hostage by Hamas. Jeremiah Smith and Hersh Goldberg-Polin were childhood friends while growing up in the Chicago area. (Jeremiah Smith; Rachel Goldberg/AP)
Smith has driven around Chicago, New York City, Pittsburgh, Milwaukee, Indianapolis, St. Louis and parts of New Jersey to date.
Despite masked pro-Palestinian protesters kicking his truck, throwing water at it and trying to open the door while he was driving, he just keeps going, he said.
"They were giving me the middle finger. They cussed me out."
Smith described his experience driving around DePaul University in Chicago in May while pro-Palestinian protesters surrounded the campus in encampments.
"They were giving me the middle finger. They cussed me out," Smith said.
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"A couple of people called me a White supremacist. A couple of people called me the N-word."
He said that some tried to incite him to fight. "I felt maybe one time that I was going to get attacked."
"I'm going to be out here until every hostage is home."
Smith added, "They [say] they want peace, but they really don’t. I saw how much hate there was."
After five months of driving this truck six days a week, Smith reported that out of all the protesters he encountered, "maybe two people came to talk to me who were peaceful."
Jeremiah Smith with Leebie Goldberg-Polin a few weeks ago in Chicago. Smith said he wants everybody to know he’s never going to stop fighting for the hostages still held by Hamas terrorists. For months, he's been driving a truck with hostages' pictures on it to remind others of the captives' plight. (Jeremiah Smith)
He continued, "Some people, when I tried to talk to them, would just put up a 10-7 [with their hands] … then [would make a sign] with their fingers [as if they're] slicing their throat."
Smith said he wants everybody to know that he’s never going to stop fighting for the hostages held by Hamas terrorists to be freed.
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His devotion to a friend and to the cause has deep roots in his own upbringing.
‘First Jewish person I met’
Smith grew up in the Cabrini-Green housing project in the Near North Side area of Chicago.
"There was violence. Some people were selling drugs, [there were] fights … I was seeing people locked up. I was seeing people shot," he said.
For Smith, the silver lining was playing baseball with his friends and meeting Marcy Goldberg when he was six years old, "the first Jewish person I [ever] met."
She was his tutor at the George Manierre Elementary School in Chicago, he said.
Jeremiah Smith with Hersh Goldberg-Polin in 2006 when they were growing up together as boys. (Jeremiah Smith)
Goldberg invited Smith to her Chicago suburb apartment to celebrate Shabbat with her family — including young Hersh, who was just a toddler at the time, he said.
Smith fondly remembered Marcy Goldberg delivering grape juice and challah rolls to patients who were spending Shabbat at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
She and other volunteers at the program she started made over 35,000 visits to patients in a 25-year period, according to Chabad.org.
The Goldberg-Polins became Smith’s surrogate family.
Marcy Goldberg’s charitable nature extended to Smith and his family.
She took Smith into her home and cared for him from the ages of 11 to 18. His siblings also lived with her at different times.
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"I felt safe at Marcy’s house," he said.
The Goldberg-Polins became Smith’s surrogate family.
Every year for Passover, he went with Hersh’s parents, Jon Polin and Rachel Goldberg-Polin, and both sets of young Hersh's grandparents, to a Passover retreat at Camp Ramah Darom for about 10 days in Atlanta, Georgia.
Jeremiah Smith with Marcy Goldberg. This photo was taken during Passover, 2024, in Chicago. Marcy Goldberg helped raise Smith during a period of his childhood. (Jeremiah Smith)
Smith relayed how he and Hersh Goldberg-Polin formed a close childhood bond, and described Hersh as having a great sense of humor.
"He’s very funny," Smith said. "If you were around him … he would make his presence known by cracking a joke when it’s very quiet."
The Goldberg-Polin family moved to Israel in 2008, when Hersh was almost eight years old.
Smith added, "He’s so friendly with everybody. You’re going to know that he’s in the room."
Smith remembered flying overseas for the first time to attend his friend Hersh’s bar mitzvah in Israel. "It was so fun," Smith said. "I told Marcy I wanted to have one."
The Goldberg-Polin family moved to Israel in 2008, when Hersh was almost eight years old, according to previous reporting by Fox News Digital.
‘Going to find a way to get home'
Smith stayed in close contact with the family over the years. He estimated that since Oct. 7, he’s seen Marcy Goldberg about 70 times.
When Smith found out his friend Hersh had been at the Supernova music festival in Israel on Oct. 7, he said, "My heart started beating really fast. [It] dropped into my stomach … I just thought about Marcy."
Hersh Goldberg-Polin is among those taken by Hamas terrorists on Oct. 7, 2023, and still held to this day. "He’s going to find a way to make everyone happy," said Jeremiah Smith about his childhood friend. "He’s the type of person you want in your life." (Goldberg-Polin family)
Smith relayed that when he rushed over to her apartment 30 minutes away, she resolutely told him, "He’s going to be home soon. He’s fine."
He added, "If you know who Hersh is, you know [that] he’s going to find a way to get home. He’s going to find a way to make everyone happy. He’s the type of person you want in your life."
Smith met Jeff Aeder, 62, a longtime family friend of the Goldberg-Polins, at his first Shabbat dinner at Marcy Goldberg’s when he was young.
"Antisemitism is not a progressive idea. It is an illiberal idea that has no place in this country."
Smith said that his own father was "great," but he was using drugs at the time — and Aeder became "like a second father" to him.
Aeder told Fox News Digital that he came up with the idea of hiring Smith to drive a truck with pictures of Hersh and other hostages across it to combat the hate-filled messages he saw after Oct. 7.
A person holds a poster of Hersh Goldberg-Polin during a rally in Central Park marking 150 days since hostages were taken in an attack on Israel on March 10, 2024, in New York City. (Noam Galai/Getty Images)
"I saw some trucks with Hamas slogans on them and it infuriated me," he said. "It was really just surreal that people were coming out and supporting a massacre."
Aeder said he wanted to have a peaceful and nonconfrontational way of getting across two messages.
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"One is that we can't forget about the hostages," he said. "Two is that antisemitism is not a progressive idea. It is an illiberal idea that has no place in this country."
He added, "We can't just be quiet and not stand up. We have to let them know that we're not going to be intimidated."
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As for Smith, who is still driving a truck with hostage pictures on it, "I'm going to be out here until every hostage is home," he said.
"And when Hersh comes home, and there are still hostages there, I’m still going to be out here."
Jeremiah Smith with Hersh Goldberg-Polin in Michigan in 2006, plus a more recent photo of Goldberg-Polin. (Jeramiah Smith; Rachel Goldberg/AP)
It has been over 300 days since the hostages' loved ones have heard from them.
It is believed that 111 of the 251 hostages abducted on Oct. 7 are still being held captive in Gaza.
Dozens may no longer be alive, according to The Times of Israel.
Eve Glover is a contributing writer for Fox News Digital.