Hostages in Gaza endure another winter as their families plead for a
ceasefire
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[January 08, 2025]
By TIA GOLDENBERG
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — When Luis Har was kidnapped by Hamas-led
militants on the warm morning of Oct. 7, 2023, he was forced into Gaza
wearing shorts and a T-shirt. As his captivity stretched into weeks and
then months, the cold, wet winter set in, bringing along with it a dread
he had never endured before.
“I felt a penetrating cold in my bones,” said Har, 71, who was rescued
in mid-February in an Israeli military raid. With no heating in the
apartment where he was held, the cold from the floor permeated his thin
mattress at night. Fighting outside shattered the apartment windows,
sending in rain and wind.
While Har is spending this winter warm and free, dozens of hostages
still in captivity are not. Their families and supporters are desperate
for a ceasefire deal to bring an end to their 15-month-long nightmare.
“Winter makes it much harder, much more complicated,” said Har. “They
must return as quickly as possible.”
The hostages often experience the same dire circumstances as hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians in Gaza, whether it be food scarcity, the
dangers from Israeli bombardments or the winter. The war in Gaza,
sparked by Hamas’ attack, has displaced most of Gaza’s 2.3 million
population, many of whom are weathering a second winter in tents that
are barely holding up against the wind, rain and temperatures that can
drop below 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit) at night.
Israel and Hamas are considering a deal that would free some hostages in
exchange for Palestinians imprisoned by Israel and a halt to the
fighting in Gaza. But despite reports of progress, the families of
hostages have been shattered by previous rounds of promising talks that
have suddenly collapsed. They fear the same could happen now.
“It is a dagger in our hearts,” said Ofri Bibas Levy, about the
rollercoaster of hope and despair the families have lived throughout the
war. Bibas Levy’s brother, Yarden Bibas, along with his wife Shiri and
sons Ariel, 5, and Kfir, 1, are being held in Gaza. “Either it happens
now or it doesn’t happen at all,” she told Israeli Army Radio.
During its attack on southern Israel, Hamas killed 1,200 people and
kidnapped about 250, more than 100 of whom were freed in a brief
ceasefire in the early weeks of the war. Since then, Israel has killed
more than 45,000 people in Gaza, more than half of them women and
children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish
between fighters and noncombatants in its count.
Of the roughly 100 hostages who remain in Gaza, one third are said to be
dead, some killed during Hamas’ initial attack and others killed or
having died in captivity. Israel has rescued eight hostages and has
recovered the bodies of dozens.
The hostages range in age from 1 to 86, and are believed to be scattered
throughout the Gaza Strip. They have been held in apartments or in
Hamas’ web of underground tunnels, which are cramped, damp and stifling,
according to testimony from freed hostages.
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Luis Har, who was rescued from Hamas captivity in an Israeli raid
last year, poses for a photo surrounded by empty chairs with
photographs of other hostages' eyes, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday,
Jan. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)
Many families have no idea what conditions their loved ones face,
uncertainty that heightens their concern.
“You see a rainy day, or a cold day or whatever is going on outside,
a storm, and it kills you,” said Michael Levy, whose brother Or, 34,
was captured from an outdoor music festival after his wife was
killed by militants, leaving their now 3-year-old son, Almog,
without his parents.
Yehonatan Sabban, a spokesperson for the Hostages Families Forum,
said the hostages are undernourished, with low fat reserves and
weakened immune systems, making them more vulnerable to
complications from illness in winter.
“Everyone is in a life-threatening situation that demands their
immediate release,” Sabban said.
Har said the conditions of his captivity worsened during winter. For
weeks, he had been held with four members of his family who had also
been kidnapped — along with a Shih Tzu smuggled in by one of them.
Three of them and the dog were freed in the first and only ceasefire
agreement in late November. That left Har and his relative Fernando
Marman alone with their captors in a second-floor apartment in the
southern Gaza city of Rafah.
Har pled with his captors, who wore heavy coats, to bring them
warmer clothes. They did — although they were ridden with holes.
Every 10 days or so, they washed themselves with water from a
bucket. A shattered window was sealed with a tarp.
In the first few weeks of captivity, there was food. Ingredients
were delivered and Har took on the role of chef. When there were
tomatoes, he made tomato soup with some rice. With canned peas, he
made pea soup. But as the war dragged on and the temperature
dropped, food became scarce. They were delighted when a captor
brought one egg for them to share. For weeks, he and Marman split a
single pita a day.
When he was rescued in a nighttime operation in mid-February, he ran
shoeless out of the apartment and into a nearby greenhouse. Soldiers
gave him a pair of shoes and a coat and spirited him home. The raid
killed about 70 Palestinians, according to local authorities.
The families of the remaining hostages are pinning their hopes on
the latest round of ceasefire talks.
“All I have is to pray that he’s somehow OK,” Levy said of his
brother’s fate, “and know that the human spirit is stronger than
anything.”
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