Marin Independent Journal

Captivity details emerge with hostages' return

- By Julia Frankel

Plastic chairs as beds. Meals of bread and rice. Hours spent waiting for the bathroom. As hostages return to Israel after seven weeks of Hamas captivity, informatio­n about the conditions of their confinemen­t has begun to trickle out.

The 58 hostages freed under a cease-fire deal over the past three days have largely stayed out of the public eye, with most still in hospitals around the country.

Nearly two months after Hamas militants dragged them into Gaza during a bloody cross-border attack on Israel that also killed 1,200 people, most freed hostages appear to be in stable physical condition.

Informatio­n about the conditions of their captivity has been tightly controlled, but family members of the released hostages have begun to share details about their loved ones' experience­s.

Merav Raviv, whose three relatives were released by Hamas on Friday, said they had been fed irregularl­y and had eaten mainly rice and bread. She said her cousin and aunt, Keren and Ruth Munder, had each lost around seven kilos (15 pounds) in just 50 days.

Raviv said she'd heard from her freed family members that they had slept on rows of chairs pushed together in a room that looked like a reception area. They said they sometimes had to wait hours before going to the bathroom.

Adva Adar, the grandchild of 85-year-old released hostage Yaffa Adar, said her grandmothe­r had also lost weight.

“She counted the days of her captivity,” Adar said. “She came back and she said, `I know that I've been there for 50 days.'”

Adar said that her grandmothe­r was taken captive convinced that her family members were dead, only to emerge to the news that they had survived. Still, her release was bitterswee­t: she also found out that her house had been ravaged by militants.

“For an 85-year-old woman, usually you have your house where you raised your kids, you have your memories, your photo albums, your clothes,” said Adar. “She has nothing, and in her old age she needs to start over. She mentioned that it is tough for her.”

In the 50 days since the hostages were taken captive, Israel has devastated the Gaza Strip with

a ground and air offensive that has killed at least 13,300 Palestinia­ns, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-ruled territory. Under the current four-day cease-fire, Hamas has agreed to release a total of 50 Israeli hostages in exchange for Israel releasing 150 Palestinia­n security prisoners and ramping up aid to the pummeled enclave.

Eighteen foreign nationals, mostly Thais, have also been released.

Eleven more hostages are set to be released Monday on the last day of the ceasefire, leaving close to 180 hostages in the Gaza Strip. Israeli authoritie­s have said that they are willing to extend the truce one day for every 10 hostages released by Hamas.

The fullest image yet of life under Hamas captivity was conjured by 85-yearold Yocheved Lipschitz, a hostage who was freed before the current cease-fire. Upon her release, Lipschitz

said she had been held in tunnels which stretched under Gaza “like a spider web.” She said her captors “told us they are people who believe in the Quran and wouldn't hurt us.”

Lifshitz said captives were treated well and received medical care, including medication. The guards kept conditions clean, she said. Hostages were given one meal a day of cheese, cucumber and pita, she said, adding that her captors ate the same.

There were initial indication­s that the recently freed hostages had also been held undergroun­d. Eyal Nouri, the nephew of Adina Moshe, 72, who was freed on Friday, said his aunt “had to adjust to the sunlight” because she had been in darkness for weeks.

“She was in complete darkness,” said Nouri. “She was walking with her eyes down because she was in a tunnel. She was not used to the daylight. And during her captivity, she was disconnect­ed ... from all the outside world.”

Nouri said that Moshe didn't know that she was going to be released until the very last moment.

“Until she saw the Red Cross,” he said. “This is the moment when she realized, okay, these horrifying seven weeks are over.”

She emerged to the news that her husband had been killed by the militants and her son's family had miraculous­ly survived.

Doctors have warned of the steep psychologi­cal toll of captivity. Israel has made counseling and other support available to those who have been released.

But most of the freed hostages have appeared to be in good physical condition, able to walk and speak normally.

 ?? HAIM ZACH — GPO HANDOUT VIA AP ?? Sharon Hertzman, right, hugs a relative as they reunite at Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel, Saturday.
HAIM ZACH — GPO HANDOUT VIA AP Sharon Hertzman, right, hugs a relative as they reunite at Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel, Saturday.

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