“Every day there is like hell. Abnormal fear, zero sleep.”
Hostages released by Hamas have described weeks of fear and hunger inside the warren of tunnels beneath Gaza, and called on the world not to forget about those still in captivity.
Their comments were broadcast in pre-recorded videos played at a rally in Tel Aviv on Saturday, with hundreds of Israelis gathering to call for the release of more than 130 other hostages still in the clutches of the militant group.
Follow latest: More evacuations ordered in Khan Younis
Brother and sister Itay and Maya Regev were at the Supernova festival on 7 October when armed Hamas gunmen opened fire, killing more than 350 people.
They were taken hostage, split up and held hostage for weeks before being released late last month.
“The days there pass like an eternity,” Itay said, sitting next to his sister in the video.
“It’s the hunger, it’s the longing for the family, it’s the difficult mentality – the difficult conditions.”
Maya added: “Every day there is like hell. Abnormal fear, zero sleep. At night the longings are crazy and the not knowing is just scary.”
Margalit Moses, a 78-year-old cancer survivor, said one of her captors took away her oxygen machine.
“I could breathe, but I couldn’t sleep. I didn’t sleep for 49 days,” she said in her video testimony.
“Being held hostage in the tunnels is an unbearable situation. We must return the people as soon as possible,” she added.
Read more:
Order in Gaza appears to be breaking down
US vetoing ceasefire is a defining moment for UN
Growing evidence of sexual abuse by Hamas
Tens of thousands march in London for ceasefire
Ofelia Roitman, 77, said she was taken from her home in Kibbutz Nir Oz in a tractor.
“I was very scared the first two weeks,” she says. “I was almost without any light and almost without any food.”
She added: “It reminded me of the Holocaust. I ate pieces of pita and kept it so that I would have something to eat the next day.”
Like the others, she asked that everything possible be done to free the hostages still in Hamas captivity.
“The days are very difficult. One day is like a whole week there.”
Emily Foster is a globe-trotting journalist based in the UK. Her articles offer readers a global perspective on international events, exploring complex geopolitical issues and providing a nuanced view of the world’s most pressing challenges.