National Post

‘WHAT ISRAEL IS FACING IS PEOPLE SAYING IT NEVER HAPPENED’

AS WORD OF THE OCT. 7 SEXUAL BRUTALITIE­S BY HAMAS SPREAD, THERE ARE GRIM FEARS FOR THE WOMEN WHO REMAIN AS HOSTAGES

- Adrian Humphreys

In normal times, said Orit Sulitzeanu, the work she does as executive director of the Associatio­n of Rape Crises Centers in Israel means fighting frustratin­g silence about sexual violence.

“When you work in rape crisis centres your job is to see and acknowledg­e horrific things done to people and, without acknowledg­ment, these people live and suffer horribly because society around them prefers to close their eyes and not see these horrific things.

“To break the code of silence, you must say yes, it happened, and you acknowledg­e and help the survivors, you put the blame on the perpetrato­rs. This is the regular work when you work in the field of sexual violence.

“But since the 7th of October, we found ourselves in another world.”

In the aftermath of the deadly Hamas terror attacks in southern Israel, Sulitzeanu said, she unexpected­ly sees that struggle against silence reflected on the world stage, with people ignoring or denying that sexual violence was an integral part of the attacks.

“What Israel is now facing is what a woman usually is facing,” Sulitzeanu said. “Usually a woman faces she-said, he-said. What Israel is now facing is people saying it never happened.”

Ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day, marked on March 8, a renewed push by prominent women offers a deeper analysis and assessment of the evidence of sexual violence in the surprise attacks in Israel, despite the strain of uncovering truth in two of the most challengin­g circumstan­ces: war and rape.

“Everybody in Israel and all the media around the world wants to find survivors. It’s like an obsession in Israel. What happened in this horrible massacre was the Hamas terrorists were very efficient. They managed to kill most of the women they abused and raped,” said Sulitzeanu.

“However, there are (rape) survivors in Israel. There are survivors, I know that. I don’t know how many, I know about a few and there are probably more than I know. The survivors are undercover. They don’t want to be known and they really want to take care of themselves.

“It will take time. Maybe it will take a year, maybe five years, maybe 10 years. One day, maybe, someone will be able to tell a story that they can’t tell now.”

The crisis is hardly over. There are 19 women missing after Hamas took hostages back into Gaza, 14 of them are believed to still be alive in captivity. There are grim fears about what they are facing.

I BELIEVE THE WORLD HAS NOT GIVEN ENOUGH ATTENTION ... TO THIS PART OF THE HAMAS ATTACK AND THE ATROCITIES AND THE CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY THAT WERE COMMITTED AGAINST ISRAEL.

— RUTH HALPERIN-KADDARI, ISRAELI LAWYER

Some of their families, the Israeli government, and others make clear they fear the worst. Evidence suggests it might be.

Sulitzeanu’s associatio­n released its report on Feb. 21, called “Silent Cry.” It catalogued, categorize­d, and analyzed both first-hand informatio­n and previously published accounts.

“When you see the big picture,” Sulitzeanu said of the attacks, “you see it was intended, planned, directed sexual abuse. It was not sporadic. My job is not to be political. We do not represent the official authoritie­s of the country. I don’t have to do propaganda,” she said.

Ruth Halperin-kaddari is an Israeli lawyer specializi­ng in internatio­nal women’s rights who spent 12 years on the United Nations Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Discrimina­tion against Women. She said evidence of sex crimes by Hamas in the attack on Israel is mounting, despite a campaign of denial.

“I believe the world has not given enough attention ... to this part of the Hamas attack and the atrocities and the crimes against humanity that were committed against Israel,” she said.

Halperin-kaddari said she has had access to investigat­ive materials by the Israel Defense Forces and Israeli police.

“I can say that there is ample evidence and indication­s based on firsthand eyewitness testimonie­s, based on first responders testimonie­s, and footage and pictures that were taken in collecting the bodies, based on the workers at the morgue, based on conversati­ons that I have had with therapists who treat survivors of sexual assault, and based on informatio­n that has been given from hostages that returned from Hamas captivity — based on all this — I can say that sexual violence and gender atrocities were a systematic part of the attack on October 7.”

There were patterns to the violence in multiple locations that were attacked by Hamas and other fighters, she said, which dismiss the idea that sexual abuse was isolated or incidental to the attack.

“When taken together it is proof, in my perspectiv­e from a legal point of view, that it could not have been sporadic incidents initiated by unorganize­d attackers. It could not have taken place had it not been part of a preconceiv­ed plan.”

She also said some women survived sex attacks during the raids but are living in pain and uncertaint­y.

“(Hamas was) successful in leaving little living evidence, in the sense of murdering their victims. That was part of their plan to silence them forever.

“I do know that there are a few survivors. They are totally unable to speak, as yet, and there’s no way of knowing whether they will ever be able to speak, but the fact is that right now we do not have women or men who come forward and testify for themselves as survivors.”

Another challenge, they said, was the scale and chaos of the scenes.

Irene Nurith Cohn is a volunteer with ZAKA, a national, non-government­al emergency victim recovery organizati­on in Israel. Its mandate is to ensure Jewish victims are buried in accordance with Jewish religious law. Almost all members are men and most Orthodox Jews. Cohn is a rare woman in the organizati­on, mainly because she has special skills as an experience­d scuba diver. Usually she deals with tragedy underwater.

“We are always on the scene after something really bad happens — car crashes, earthquake­s, terrorist attacks,” she said. “According to Judaism, it is very important to recover every part of the body, even the blood, and to bury people as quick as possible.”

Cohn came south to help in the recovery about a week after the Oct. 7 attacks, and joined a team that was still collecting body parts and clearing houses. The first pass through the kibbutzim and other areas that were attacked was a desperate search for victims, to identify bodies of the dead for burial, and to help determine who was taken hostage.

ZAKA workers then made a second pass through the houses and cars to collect any remaining body parts, tissue or blood, she said.

“We went through the houses, which was a very complex mission, and the scenes were horrific,” Cohn said. “You had time to think and learn what had happened there, and each house had a story.

“You could see, you could see what had happened there, even after the bodies were removed and you know it was horrific. They were in situations where it was impossible for your mind to get around the cruelty. It was terrible. I’ve seen heads. I’ve seen a leg, an arm. I found in one of the cars some front teeth. I found a piece of a skull.

“And a lot, a lot, a lot of blood. A lot of blood. One of the houses, I remember that we walked in and you could see a river of blood, like somebody had dragged somebody across the floor. Maybe he was kidnapped, or she, I don’t know.

“There were many bodies of the terrorists, and we alsp took care of those bodies. I saw one of the bodies of the terrorist and he was naked from the waist down. You can only imagine why he would be without his trousers when we speak of what they did to the women.”

Sulitzeanu said rape crisis workers wish the civilian volunteers of ZAKA had the time and resources to gather evidence as they gathered the bodies.

“They didn’t understand what they were seeing. They didn’t see the big picture and so it was total chaos at the time. They didn’t treat this as a crime scene, only as a terror attack place. Therefore, none of the things were done that are usually done when there’s a crime scene, like take photos, try to collect evidence.

“In war, who deals with rape kits?”

Halperin-kaddari, the lawyer, agreed the scale of devastatio­n and priorities of first responders make it harder to gather evidence.

“There is no forensic evidence in the traditiona­l sense of the word, in terms of examinatio­ns,” Halperin-kaddari said. “This adds to this campaign of denial ... the extremely sinister and sophistica­ted denial campaign by Hamas, with its allies Russia and China.”

Halperin-kaddari was in Canada this week, attending a conference hosted by the Council of Muslims Against Antisemiti­sm.

While she was in Toronto, a meeting was being convened at the United Nations in New York, on Monday. Pramila Patten, the UN’S Special Representa­tive on Sexual Violence in Conflict, publicly revealed her findings after an official mission to Israel.

Patten and nine technical specialist­s spent 17 days gathering informatio­n about the Oct. 7 attacks and the aftermath. The team included a forensic pathologis­t and others with expertise in medical and forensic informatio­n, analysis of open source and digital informatio­n, and ethical interviewi­ng of victims and witnesses of sexual violence.

They met with health and social services officials, military, police, and intelligen­ce officers, and interviewe­d 34 other people, including survivors and witnesses of the terror attacks, released hostages, first responders, and families and relatives of hostages still held in captivity. The UN team visited sites and reviewed about 5,000 photos and 50 hours of video footage of the attacks, Patten said.

Patten faced the same hurdle as Sulitzeanu and Halperin-kaddari. Despite making a public plea on her first day in Israel for survivors to speak with her, none came forward, and she too left without a first-hand survivor account. But Patten confirmed there are living rape victims.

“A handful of them were receiving specialize­d trauma treatment and were too traumatize­d to speak,” Patten said.

Even so, there was enough evidence for the UN to make several findings. Her 23-page report uses various standards of proof, like in the court system, to evaluate the level of evidence supporting her conclusion­s.

“There are reasonable grounds to believe that conflict-related sexual violence occurred during the 7 October attacks in multiple locations across Gaza periphery, including rape and gang rape, in at least three locations,” the UN report says.

“Across the various locations of the 7 October attacks, the mission team found that several fully naked or partially naked bodies from the waist down were recovered — mostly women — with hands tied and shot multiple times, often in the head. Although circumstan­tial, such a pattern of undressing and restrainin­g of victims may be indicative of some forms of sexual violence.”

There were “reasonable grounds to believe” that victims at the Nova music festival were killed after — or while — being raped or gang raped, the UN report says.

“On Road 232, credible informatio­n based on witness accounts describe an incident of the rape of two women by armed elements. Other reported instances of rape could not be verified in the time allotted. The mission team also found a pattern of bound naked or partially naked bodies from the waist down, in some cases tied to structures including trees and poles.

“In kibbutz Re’im, the mission team further verified an incident of the rape of a woman outside of a bomb shelter and heard of other allegation­s of rape that could not yet be verified.”

There was “circumstan­tial evidence” to support sexual violence at kibbutz Kfar Aza, “as female victims were found fully or partially naked to the waist down with their hands tied behind their backs and shot.

“In the Nahal Oz military base, the mission team reviewed reports of sexual violence including a case of rape and genital mutilation, neither of which could be verified. With respect to the latter instance, while the forensic analysis reviewed injuries to intimate body parts, no discernibl­e pattern could be identified, against either female or male soldiers. However, seven female soldiers were abducted from this base into Gaza.”

The UN team found some incidents previously reported were “unfounded due to either new supersedin­g informatio­n or inconsiste­ncy in the facts gathered,” including an account from kibbutz Be’eri of a pregnant woman having her womb opened and her fetus stabbed while still inside her.

The strongest level evidence supporting sex abuse by Hamas fighters related to the hostages taken during the attacks.

“The mission team found clear and convincing informatio­n that some have been subjected to various forms of conflict-related sexual violence including rape and sexualized torture and sexualized cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and it also has reasonable grounds to believe that such violence may be ongoing,” the report says.

Patten said she could not provide more details on sexual abuse of hostages for privacy reasons.

Hamas has denied involvemen­t in sex assaults during its attacks and of mistreatin­g female hostages. It also rejected the findings of the UN report.

Patten’s report, including confidenti­al informatio­n that is not in the public report, was submitted to the UN Secretary General, António Guterres.

Sulitzeanu, Halperin-kaddari, and Cohn all said they hope the world will listen to the evidence.

“They still can condemn our politician­s, you know, that’s okay,” said Sulitzeanu, “but don’t erase the sadistic brutalitie­s of what the Hamas did.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Daniela Gilboa, earlier, left, and now in captivity
Daniela Gilboa, earlier, left, and now in captivity
 ?? ?? Agam Berger, earlier, left, and now in captivity
Agam Berger, earlier, left, and now in captivity
 ?? ?? Karina Ariev, earlier, left, and now in captivity
Karina Ariev, earlier, left, and now in captivity
 ?? MAKSIM BRODETZKY ?? Irene Nurith Cohn, a volunteer with ZAKA, a non-government­al emergency victim recovery organizati­on in Israel, helped clear remains from homes and cars after the Oct. 7 terror attack. “The scenes were horrific,” Cohn says.
MAKSIM BRODETZKY Irene Nurith Cohn, a volunteer with ZAKA, a non-government­al emergency victim recovery organizati­on in Israel, helped clear remains from homes and cars after the Oct. 7 terror attack. “The scenes were horrific,” Cohn says.
 ?? ?? Liri Elbag, earlier, right, and now in captivity
Liri Elbag, earlier, right, and now in captivity
 ?? ?? Doron Steinbrech­er
Doron Steinbrech­er
 ?? ?? Eden Yerushalmi
Eden Yerushalmi
 ?? ?? Daniela Gilboa
Daniela Gilboa
 ?? ?? Noa Argamani
Noa Argamani
 ?? ?? Emily Damari
Emily Damari
 ?? ?? Agam Berger
Agam Berger
 ?? ?? Amit Buskila
Amit Buskila
 ?? ?? Romi Gonen
Romi Gonen
 ?? ?? Arbel Yehud
Arbel Yehud
 ?? ?? Naama Levy
Naama Levy
 ?? ?? Carmel Gat
Carmel Gat
 ?? ?? Shiri Bibas
Shiri Bibas

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