

As seen in The Media Line
A mural in honor of children killed in regional violence and unrest in Iran will be unveiled in Israel, presenting the victims through a symbolic depiction of a children’s football match, according to project details released by its organizers and artist Hooman Khalili.
The installation centers on Druze children in green, representing 12 children killed by a Hezbollah rocket on July 27, 2024, in Majdal Shams while playing football, facing children in red symbolizing minors killed in Iran since September 2022. The figures are depicted as players rather than adversaries.

Sheik Dr. Rafea Halabi from Daliyat al-Karmel, Sheik Hussein Taraby and his son Ali from Buq’ata village, Naela and Ayman Fakher Aldin from Majdal Shams village. (Courtesy)
Above the scene appears Zahra Azadpour, a young female footballer killed during unrest in Iran in January 2026, portrayed as the referee.
The mural incorporates imagery of Nabi Shu’ayb (Jethro’s Tomb) in the Galilee and Tehran’s Azadi Tower, alongside the Lion and Sun symbol, described in the project as representing resilience and identity.
The Druze children named in the installation are Fajr Laith, Ameer Rabeea, Hazem Akram, Wadeea Ibrahim, Iseel Nashaat, Yazan Nayeif, Finis Adham, Alma Ayman, Naji Taher, Milad Muadad, and Nathem Fakher.
Children cited as among those killed in Iran include Kian Pirfalak, Sarina Esmailzadeh, Nika Shakarami, Asra Panahi, Mohammad Eghbal, Hasti Narouei, Mona Naghib, Helen Ahmadi, Ali Rezaei, and Mirshekar Abolfazl, along with others.
According to the project description, Amnesty International has reported that Iranian security forces killed children during protests using live ammunition, metal pellets, and beatings, and that authorities attempted to conceal the incidents and silence families.
Artist Hooman Khalili told The Media Line: “I see these murals and banners as the roots of something much bigger. The roots are here in Israel—but my hope is that the tree will grow and fully blossom in the United States.”
He added, “My prayer is to have this mural installed in the US before or during the FIFA World Cup, when the eyes of the world are watching. When that moment comes, I want people everywhere to see the truth—to understand the brutality of the Islamic regime and the reality that children are being targeted.”
“This is about making sure their stories are seen, remembered, and impossible to ignore,” Khalili concluded.
Hooman Khalili is an Iranian-born artist, filmmaker, and activist known for large-scale murals supporting Iranian protesters and highlighting human rights issues. Born in Tehran in 1974, he grew up in California and has worked in film, radio, and public art projects across Israel and the United States.
Hooman Khalili is an Iranian‑born visual artist, filmmaker, and creative director based in the San Francisco Bay Area whose current work centers on large‑scale murals about Iran, Israel, and the struggle of Iranian women. San Francisco–based radio personality, filmmaker, and mural artist who spent 21 years on the “Sarah and Vinnie” Morning Show on Alice Radio 97.3 FM (CBS Radio) in the Bay Area. Served as phone screener, on-air movie critic, and celebrity interviewer, conducting red-carpet and press junket interviews for major events including the Grammys, MTV Video Music Awards, Sundance Film Festival, Super Bowl 50, and CBS’s fall TV lineups. Has interviewed dozens of A‑list figures including Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Donald Trump, Tom Hanks, Robert Downey Jr., Harrison Ford, Jerry Seinfeld, George Lucas, Maroon 5, 50 Cent, and was the last person to interview Hunter S. Thompson before his death. Collaborated with all major Hollywood studios on the promotion of more than 1,000 films over two decades, building deep relationships across the entertainment industry. Appeared as a voice actor in Pixar’s “Cars,” expanding his reach from radio into animated film. Wrote, directed, and shot “Olive,” the first full-length feature film captured entirely on a cell phone (Nokia N8), which qualified for Academy Award consideration and stars two-time Oscar nominee Gena Rowlands with original songs by Dolly Parton. Created the number-one most-viewed nonpartisan “get out the vote” video for U.S. youth in the 2008 presidential election, earning 5.1 million YouTube views and a place in the Museum of Radio and Television in New York. Frequent speaker and presenter at major festivals and conferences, including Sundance, SXSW, Napa Valley, Sonoma, Mill Valley, LA Film Fest, SF Film Fest, Macworld, the Disposable Film Festival in Washington, D.C., and the Ethiopia Film Festival. Global humanitarian and mission worker who has served in South Africa, Costa Rica, Armenia, Bali, Hong Kong, South Korea, Mexico, Germany, Greece, Uganda, South Sudan, and long-term on the streets of San Francisco with people experiencing homelessness. Former choir director at St. Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Church in San Francisco and current creative volunteer who makes short movies with terminally ill children battling cancer, using storytelling to bring joy and spark imagination. Conceptualized and leads an international “mural diplomacy” project, designing and installing murals in Israel and the United States to draw attention to the Iranian people’s fight for freedom, including multiple works displayed in Jerusalem. Recognized as a multifaceted creative force whose career spans radio, film, visual art, and humanitarian service, with a consistent focus on amplifying underrepresented voices and causes.
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