Zürcher Nachrichten - Freed Israeli hostage recounts 484-day nightmare in Gaza

EUR -
AED 4.321955
AFN 74.141068
ALL 96.206942
AMD 443.599209
ANG 2.106234
AOA 1079.165777
ARS 1636.401294
AUD 1.66791
AWG 2.118319
AZN 2.026114
BAM 1.954818
BBD 2.371578
BDT 143.887095
BGN 1.939022
BHD 0.443707
BIF 3490.518447
BMD 1.176844
BND 1.492631
BOB 8.136946
BRL 6.131823
BSD 1.177493
BTN 107.201772
BWP 15.629948
BYN 3.355371
BYR 23066.13674
BZD 2.36811
CAD 1.610922
CDF 2671.435077
CHF 0.912636
CLF 0.025796
CLP 1018.581594
CNY 8.130519
CNH 8.118821
COP 4354.957227
CRC 565.808506
CUC 1.176844
CUP 31.186358
CVE 110.799769
CZK 24.240686
DJF 209.148565
DKK 7.471881
DOP 72.081839
DZD 153.094775
EGP 55.906671
ERN 17.652656
ETB 183.058075
FJD 2.589409
FKP 0.86943
GBP 0.874283
GEL 3.154568
GGP 0.86943
GHS 12.951169
GIP 0.86943
GMD 86.504138
GNF 10329.751538
GTQ 9.034461
GYD 246.343088
HKD 9.196316
HNL 31.197812
HRK 7.534037
HTG 154.340487
HUF 379.415003
IDR 19896.896626
ILS 3.681291
IMP 0.86943
INR 107.141675
IQD 1542.253684
IRR 49574.54152
ISK 144.904875
JEP 0.86943
JMD 183.468598
JOD 0.834418
JPY 182.581392
KES 151.812834
KGS 102.914648
KHR 4730.912279
KMF 493.09791
KPW 1059.15586
KRW 1707.363795
KWD 0.360974
KYD 0.981195
KZT 579.861266
LAK 25213.876402
LBP 105386.354327
LKR 364.256984
LRD 217.656936
LSL 19.03544
LTL 3.474913
LVL 0.711861
LYD 7.443501
MAD 10.789893
MDL 20.158615
MGA 5101.61741
MKD 61.630481
MMK 2470.900782
MNT 4201.727639
MOP 9.477617
MRU 47.050227
MUR 54.35107
MVR 18.125218
MWK 2044.177448
MXN 20.314146
MYR 4.600045
MZN 75.212174
NAD 19.041494
NGN 1582.548224
NIO 43.185387
NOK 11.250349
NPR 171.522635
NZD 1.971097
OMR 0.452497
PAB 1.177513
PEN 3.959486
PGK 5.063979
PHP 68.316244
PKR 328.987015
PLN 4.223074
PYG 7634.16432
QAR 4.284879
RON 5.097029
RSD 117.400749
RUB 90.324339
RWF 1713.484444
SAR 4.414511
SBD 9.475546
SCR 16.211403
SDG 707.87413
SEK 10.680351
SGD 1.492973
SHP 0.882938
SLE 28.832381
SLL 24677.823438
SOS 672.573666
SRD 44.276367
STD 24358.288784
STN 24.713718
SVC 10.302823
SYP 13015.391164
SZL 19.04123
THB 36.705879
TJS 11.127068
TMT 4.130721
TND 3.366137
TOP 2.833558
TRY 51.597769
TTD 7.969894
TWD 37.180612
TZS 3048.024956
UAH 50.935008
UGX 4220.861354
USD 1.176844
UYU 45.347216
UZS 14328.072251
VES 468.674678
VND 30562.63118
VUV 139.506278
WST 3.178925
XAF 655.619237
XAG 0.015054
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.180479
XCG 2.122107
XDR 0.813997
XOF 651.971435
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.681118
ZAR 19.013834
ZMK 10593.016124
ZMW 22.118981
ZWL 378.943195
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.76

    -0.21%

  • NGG

    -0.5400

    90.27

    -0.6%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    25.57

    -0.55%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.05

    -1%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.95

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    -1.2200

    84.38

    -1.45%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    60.85

    -0.54%

  • BTI

    2.1200

    60.99

    +3.48%

  • RELX

    0.4400

    30.99

    +1.42%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    96.34

    -2.69%

  • BP

    0.4800

    39.01

    +1.23%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    15.53

    -0.84%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    17.8

    -1.69%

  • AZN

    -0.0500

    208.62

    -0.02%

Freed Israeli hostage recounts 484-day nightmare in Gaza
Freed Israeli hostage recounts 484-day nightmare in Gaza / Photo: JACK GUEZ - AFP

Freed Israeli hostage recounts 484-day nightmare in Gaza

More than four months since his release from Gaza, former hostage Keith Siegel bears the mental scars of 484 days of captivity in destroyed buildings and tunnels in the hands of Palestinian militant group Hamas.

Text size:

The 66-year-old Israeli-American and his wife Aviva were among 251 hostages seized from residential communities along the Gaza border, army bases and a music festival on October 7, 2023.

In a recent interview with AFP, Siegel told of physical and sexual abuse that he had experienced and witnessed in captivity, and of the extreme stress of not knowing if he would ever see his family again.

In one incident, he recalled how his captor, out of the blue, pulled out a gun and said: "I'm going to kill you now."

"Then he said, 'now you're dead' and laughed," added Siegel, wearing a t-shirt with the words "Bring them home now", a call to free the remaining 52 hostages still in Gaza after more than 20 months.

One of the locations where Siegel was held was so far underground that he was "gasping for breath", he recalled.

"It was the most horrendous, or one of the most horrendous, situations that I was in."

He was first held with his wife, then with other hostages, as well as spending many months alone.

In total, he was moved throughout the Gaza Strip around 33 times, hidden inside tunnels or in bombed-out buildings and private homes.

During the darkest moments, Siegel said he used mindfulness techniques to stay strong, having long, imaginary conversations with family and friends.

- Nationality checks -

Throughout his ordeal, Siegel said he had focused on staying alive so he could see his wife, their four children and grandchildren.

"There were peaks of anxiety, fear and just the torture of not knowing, the uncertainty of not knowing," he said.

"I promised myself that I must return and was not able to think that I would not return. I think that gave me a lot of strength psychologically to get through the days."

Recounting some of the lowest points of his lengthy captivity, Siegel said one of his biggest fears initially was Hamas finding out that he was a US citizen, concerned that it could mean separating from his wife.

"At the very beginning, on October 7, they asked us all our names, our ages, where we're from, and if we have another nationality, citizenship... I said that I did not," he said.

"I was worried that they might release me (without Aviva), because I'm an American citizen."

She was released 51 days after the 2023 attack -- more than a year before he was, both under short-lived truce deals.

Siegel said he experienced taunts about his wife and daughter, and his genitalia, as well as extreme physical abuse that in two instances left him with broken ribs.

- 'Medieval-style torture' -

But it was witnessing the mistreatment of other hostages that made Siegel pause for breath during the interview and tear up.

"I witnessed a woman being tortured, literally," he said, describing it as "medieval-style torture".

"She was on her back, her hands were bound together, and also her feet, and they had put... tape, or a piece of material around her mouth so she couldn't talk," Siegel said.

"There was a man standing behind her with a metal rod that had a sharp point at the end of it and it was on this woman's forehead, and he was applying pressure."

Siegel did not name the woman, but his description matches an account given by released hostage Amit Soussana, in media interviews in which the 41-year-old lawyer said her captors had tried to make her confess to being an Israeli soldier.

For Siegel, having to watch the torture and being powerless to stop it still gives him "terrible thoughts".

"I just felt paralysed," he said.

- 'Bring the hostages home' -

Free now, Siegel remains fascinated with the departure "presents" handed over by his captors the day he left.

Inside a paper bag with a Hamas logo, there was a gold embossed "release certificate" signed by a commander from the group's military wing, two key rings with Palestinian flags, and a leather bracelet bearing the same flag.

Since returning home, he has become especially active in campaigning for the release of the remaining hostages.

Clutching posters of other captives he had spent extended periods of time with -- Matan Angrest, Omri Miran, and twins Gali and Ziv Berman –- Siegel called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump "to bring an end to the suffering, bring an end to the war and bring the hostages home".

A.Wyss--NZN