The Jerusalem Magistrate's court today set free a young Jewish girl who had been held for three weeks at Neveh Tirza prison while refusing to identify herself, after authorities succeeded in identifying her. She was being held together with six other girls about her same age. They were arrested working to make habitable some abandoned military style housing units on the givat haOr hill top, as part of an effort to develop an expansion neighborhood to the south of the flagship Jewish town in Judea and Samaria, Beit El.

Israel National News' brother site Arutz Sheva reports that the 14-year old girl did not identify herself, but rather was identified based on a card found among her belongings. She currently lives in the Nitzan caravan camp, after having been displaced from Gush Katif, together with approximately 8,000 other Jews, by the State of Israel in 2005.

Leading rabbis in the Nationalist Religious camp have declared today a day of prayer and fasting on behalf of those seven girls, and to save the People of Israel and especially those who live in Sderot and within range of Gaza. Arab terrorists in and near the ruins of the Gush Katif Jewish communities have, this week, launched several dozens of Kassam rockets and mortar shells daily at nearby Jewish towns, and have even repeatedly reached the city of Ashkelon.