Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Four female hostages freed spent months in tunnels without human contact.



Women are tough. Israeli women are amazingly tough. Some of them were held in tunnels without clean air, no daylight and no human contact, sometimes as long as eight months, an Israeli general reported Monday.

Don't believe that just because the four freed women hostages seemed cheerful and energetic that they were treated well, as Eiten Gonen, father of hostage Romi Gonan cautioned.

Eitan told Walla, “[T]he smiles aren’t a reflection of the conditions they endured; they’re expressions of the hostages’ joy at being freed from the Nazis. If you were rescued from hell and someone extended their hand to you, wouldn’t you smile?”

“Some of them were alone the entire time. Those who were together fared better,” said Colonel Dr. Avi Banov, deputy chief of the Israeli military’s medical corps, during an online press briefing.

Imagine being in the captivity of Islamic terrorists who want to kill all Jews, held in a tunnel for months, never knowing if you will be alive the next day, the next hour even. 

Israeli women are tough.

Under the current hostage release deal, seven women were freed in exchange for 290 Arab terrorists held prisoner in Israel for their crimes.

Many of the hostages have experienced “mild starvation” after being fed extremely meager rations of only rice or bread for over a year.

Just prior to their release, Hamas allowed them to shower and provided additional food so they would look better for the cameras and feed the propaganda machine Hamassholes count on to fool the useful idiots in the West. It was really smoke and mirrors, giving the illusion they were well treated.

Several of the hostages suffered serious injuries on the October 7th Hamas, Palestinian and Palestinian Islamic Jihad massacre, and did not receive adequate medical treatment during their captivity.

Emily Damari lost three fingers after being shot in the hand on October 7th, and Daniella Gilboa has a bullet lodged in her leg, which will be surgically removed now that she has been released.

Some of the hostages were able to hear news about the war on the radio, along with messages from their families.

Eitan Gonan described the effect hearing such messages had on his daughter, Romi.

“Even if only 10% of the interviews reached the hostages’ ears, it was enough to give them strength,” he said. “It gave her a lot of strength, energy, and great hope.”

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