Freed Israeli hostage says Hamas treated her well after initial violence
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[October 24, 2023]
By Janis Laizans
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - An elderly Israeli hostage who was released by
Hamas overnight said she had been beaten by the militants when she was
abducted and taken to Gaza on Oct. 7, but was then treated well during
her two-week captivity in the Palestinian enclave.
Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, was one of two women freed late on Monday,
leaving around 220 hostages still in the hands of Hamas, including both
of their husbands.
"I've been through hell," Lifshitz told reporters, speaking in barely a
whisper and seated in a wheelchair outside the Tel Aviv hospital, where
she was taken following her release.
Looking frail, Lifshitz said gunmen had burst into her kibbutz, Nir Oz,
taking residents by surprise.
"They stormed into our homes. They beat people. They kidnapped others,
the old and the young without distinction," she said.
Israel's public broadcaster Kan has said that a third of Nir Oz's 400
residents was believed to have been abducted or killed on Oct. 7. No
official data has been given.
Lifshitz herself was put on a motorbike and driven into nearby Gaza.
"When I was on the bike, my legs were on one side and the rest of my
body on the other side. The young men hit me on the way. They didn't
break my ribs but it was painful and I had difficulty breathing."
She said her watch and jewellery were stolen during the ride. Inside
Gaza, a group of hostages were led into what Lifshitz called a "spider's
web" of tunnels that Hamas had built beneath the coastal territory.
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Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, an Israeli grandmother who was held hostage
in Gaza, speaks to members of the press after being released by
Hamas militants, at Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv, Israel October 24,
2023. REUTERS/Janis Laizans
A group of five people from her kibbutz were held together, each
with an individual guard who stayed with them 24 hours a day.
Lifshitz said a doctor visited them every other day and brought them
the medicines they needed.
"They took good care of the wounded," Lifshitz said.
Video of her release on Monday showed her turning around to shake
the hand of a masked captor. Asked why she had done that, she
replied: "They treated us gently and met all our needs."
Speaking to Reuters on Monday, her grandson said Lifshitz was a
peace activist who used to help sick Palestinians in Gaza receive
medical treatment in Israel, meeting them at the main border
crossing and driving them to hospitals.
Lifshitz was critical on Tuesday of the Israeli military for failing
to protect southern communities from the Hamas assault, saying the
army had not taken the threat of attack seriously.
"We were left to fend for ourselves," she said.
She added that a costly security fence that was meant to keep
militants out "didn't help at all".
(Additional reporting by Henriette Chacar; Editing by Crispian
Balmer, Kevin Liffey and Bernadette Baum)
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