New Yorker Guy Tsadik decided to answer the protesters who have been tearing down posters of the hostages held by Hamas.

"There is good and evil, and you need to be on the side of good," Tsadik told Fox News Digital. "The idea that there is even one counter-protester who is legitimizing these crimes should be alarming to every American. You can't appease evil."

Family holding up posters for missing individuals

Guy Tsadik and his family canvassed local businesses to put up posters of missing individuals in the shop windows in New York's Long Island. (Guy Tsadik)

The 46-year-old New York businessman decided to become a street activist. Along with his wife Tami, their 9-year-old son Eitan and 21- year-old daughter Maya, the family set out and canvassed local businesses to put up the posters of the missing in the shop windows along the commercial strip that encompasses several towns on New York's Long Island. He said that he was met with wide-ranging support from more than 100 merchants who readily displayed the poignant and heartbreaking posters in their front windows.

OUTRAGED JEWISH STUDENT CALLS OUT NYU LEADERSHIP OVER PRO-PALESTINIAN PROTESTS: 'NEED TO DRAW THE LINE'

Kidnapped Israeli 84-year-old woman

Diza Heiman, an 84-year-old Israeli woman, is one of the nearly 200 individuals kidnapped by Hamas terrorists. (Guy Tsadik)

"This goes to the basis of humanity. I am thinking of my own children. I was seeing pictures of the hostages, kids who don't have their parents, a 4-year-old child being held hostage, who doesn't have his parents, babies in cages in Gaza. I was hoping to come up with something that I could do for them."

Tsadik found the website of the two Israeli artists from New York who have designed the posters, KidnappedfromIsrael.com. He downloaded the link at a local printer store and printed out a heavy stack of posters for his project. Mindful of the anti-Israel protesters who have gone around and torn down the hostage photos elsewhere, he prevailed on shop owners to tape his posters inside their windows.

 "I made sure that they were put inside of the stores, and not outside of the stores so that they couldn't be torn down. These people who are tearing them down would be the very same people, if they were in Gaza, they would be executed in a dark alley," he said.

Fernando Marman, a 60-year-old Israeli-Argentinian man, is among nearly 200 individuals kidnapped by Hamas terrorists.

Fernando Marman, a 60-year-old Israeli-Argentinian man, is among nearly 200 individuals kidnapped by Hamas terrorists. (Guy Tsadik)

"They are misinformed or completely evil. The fact that they do not have compassion for innocent civilians, is beyond the pale. They are justifying these crimes against humanity, while in Israeli hospitals the murderers and terrorists are being treated side by side. The perpetrators and the victims are in adjoining rooms."

TENSIONS LEAD TO UNREST AT PRO-PALESTINIAN RALLIES ACROSS US CITIES

The first distribution of the posters is in what is called "The Five Towns," the communities of Cedarhurst, Hewlett, Inwood, Lawrence and Woodmere that lie just adjacent to New York City's borough of Queens. Tsadik said other businesses that he did not visit are contacting him to get their own posters, and the operation is spreading to New Jersey.

While others across the country have been putting up posters, he is encouraging people in all communities to do the same.

"I think this can be done across the country," noting that the process is easy and available from the website.

The posters have caused outrage among some pro-Palestinian supporters. Videos of people tearing them down have also gone viral. In Florida, a dentist was fired after being caught on camera tearing down posters in Brickell, while in New York, two New York University students who were recorded tearing down signs on campus may face disciplinary action by the university.

INSIDE THE CHAOS ON CAPITOL HILL AS HUNDREDS OF PRO-PALESTINIAN JEWS ARRESTED: 'A MORAL CATASTROPHE'

Students tearing down posters

NYU student Yazmeen Deyhimi and two others were captured on video tearing down Israeli hostage posters on campus. Deyhimi has since apologized.

Tsadik said he encountered the opposite reaction. Not only were store owners supportive of the posters, but pizza parlors and sushi shops donated so much food that he brought meals to the Israeli reservists and citizens returning home who were lining up at JFK airport for the El Al flight back to the Jewish state.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

"I don't think that people truly understand the evil that we have faced for years and continue to face" he said.  

"Death is their goal, while life is ours."