Business Day

How a nurse aided elderly Hamas hostages

- Dan Williams Jerusalem

A nurse who was among scores of Israelis abducted and taken to Gaza says she spent her captivity in an undergroun­d tunnel, treating elderly fellow hostages, some hard of sight or hearing, with meagre medical supplies for which she had to haggle.

Nili Margalit was repatriate­d in a November truce between Israel and Hamas. Interviewe­d by local TV, she said Palestinia­n civilians seized her from her village and “sold” her to the Islamist gunmen who led the October 7 rampage that triggered a war.

Unaware that her father, along with about 1,200 other people, had been killed, 41-yearold Margalit was bundled barefoot into a stifling Hamas tunnel where rounded up hostages bore a variety of injuries from their rough handling.

“We were in a state of shock,” she told Channel 12 TV.

But using basic Arabic learnt in the emergency room of a southern Israeli hospital, which has Bedouin patients, Margalit informed the Hamas captors that she was a nurse. They agreed to her offer to take charge of hostages’ medical needs.

“The elderly ones worried me,” she said. “I asked them to list their important medication­s

— for heart conditions, blood pressure, kidneys.” Margalit wrote these down in English for Hamas. Days later, a black bag of pharmacy supplies arrived but proved inadequate, with some prescripti­ons mismatched.

“There were sick people. They had chronic illnesses,” she said. “There weren’t enough pills. There wasn’t enough food.”

The privation offered stopgaps, however. Near starvation meant untreated diabetes sufferers were spared hyperglyca­emia. Given only one strip of antibiotic­s, Margalit decided to save it and instead dressed a wound with honey to counter inflammati­on.

Getting new supplies needed regular negotiatio­n with Hamas captors. Some she described as senior Palestinia­n officials who would inspect the hostages and converse in Hebrew.

“I bugged them, doing it with what you might call a bit of good grace,” she said, recalling how she warned the captors that some of the hostages could succumb to their illnesses. “That frightened them. They did not want these people to die.”

Several elderly female hostages were released with Margalit, in a deal in which Israel freed scores of Palestinia­n prisoners. Elderly men remain among the 132 hostages still in Gaza — 25 of whom have died, according to Israeli officials. Hamas has said some of them were killed by shelling of Gaza, and, early in the war, Hamas also threatened to execute hostages.

Margalit believe medical supplies have run out by now. “We know that we were in tunnels, and we know that the war is currently being fought above where we were held,” she said.

Among Margalit’s fellow hostages was Yarden Bibas, who was seized separately from his wife Shiri and their two young boys, Ariel and Kfir. Such was his consternat­ion about his family’s fate that the Palestinia­n captors told him, falsely, that his wife and sons had been spotted back in Israel, Margalit said.

Then Hamas changed tack, telling Bibas Shiri, Ariel and Kfir had been killed in an Israeli air strike in Gaza video-recording his traumatise­d response.

When the captors got annoyed, their punishment of hostages included limiting the number of hours of illuminati­on in their cells or the use of ventilatio­n fans, Margalit said.

After 40 days’ captivity, she was allowed to watch some TV news, and would relay the informatio­n by shouting into the ears of elderly hostages who could not follow the reports themselves as they had been taken captive without glasses or hearing aids.

Hamas blamed the lack of food and medication on Israel’s Gaza offensive, Margalit said: “We began to feel that Israel had forsaken us, again” after failing to prevent the October 7 attack.

The tranquilli­sers and sleeping pills that Hamas supplied, at her request, helped hostages racked by long nights of worry.

“I wanted to calm down. I wanted it for myself. I thought I would go crazy at any moment,” she said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Saviour: Nili Margalit, left, and Shani Goren, hostages who had been abducted by Hamas.
/Reuters Saviour: Nili Margalit, left, and Shani Goren, hostages who had been abducted by Hamas.

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