Israelis in Shock and Anger as They Seek Their Loved Ones Following Hamas Attack

Israelis in Shock and Anger as They Seek Their Loved Ones Following Hamas Attack

Steve Markachenko, a​ 25-year-old from Carmel, in​ northern Israel, had been looking forward to attending the Nova ⁢music festival⁣ on a desert kibbutz this weekend. He and his girlfriend, Elisa Levin, 34, drove four hours​ south on Friday night for ‌the​ event celebrating the Jewish‌ harvest festival of Sukkot.

But ⁤at 6.30am on Saturday, they were among‌ thousands of​ young partygoers enjoying the sunrise, unaware that their lives were about to change forever. At first, the air raid​ sirens seemed like they were part⁢ of the trance music, survivors said.‍ Then rocket vapour trails began appearing in the sky above: people began ‍panicking about being caught‌ in the open, rushing to‌ their cars.‍ And then the gunfire began.

Around 200 people are believed to ‍have been killed at the all-night festival, and dozens more are still⁣ missing, believed to have⁤ been taken to the Gaza Strip as ⁤hostages. The attack was one ‍of the worst single‍ incidents during the Palestinian militant group Hamas’ surprise offensive Operation ⁣al-Aqsa Flood ⁢- a​ day ⁤that will go down in ‍history as Israel’s 9/11.

Some attendees watched their friends die in front of them; others played dead⁣ for hours until they⁣ heard voices speaking in Hebrew and knew help had arrived. Videos from the scene showed lifeless bodies on the ground, a shot-up van, and men⁢ and women being‍ dragged away ‌by armed militants. Screams fill the air.

One harrowing ⁤clip showed an Israeli woman identified as‌ Noa Argamani pleading for her life as she was separated from her partner and driven away⁣ on a motorbike by two Hamas fighters.

Markachenko and Levin managed ‌to escape the initial chaos, his brother Dima said. Their car’s GPS system shows the vehicle still ‌located about 5km​ (3 miles) away from the party site. But no one has heard ⁣from the couple since around 6.15am,‍ when Levin called her brother.

“We don’t know anything. ​The Home Front, the police, ⁢the army,⁢ no one has any information to give us.⁤ We’ve been to every hospital in the country, nothing. And the road ⁣is blocked, so we can’t go‍ to their‌ car,” the 32-year-old said.

“All this technology, all ⁣this stuff we have done to keep ourselves safe, the army, it meant nothing.⁤ This country is a joke.”

Israeli soldiers take ​position on the main ⁢road near the border with Gaza. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA

Markachenko was at a missing persons centre set up at a ⁤police ⁤station near Tel Aviv’s‌ airport on ​Sunday to register his brother’s name‍ and submit DNA samples. He was one of hundreds of quiet, subdued people who went ​in and out​ of the centre over ‍the‍ course of the⁤ morning. In what is usually a deeply divided society, ⁣Israelis of all ​backgrounds – secular, ultra-Orthodox, nationalist-religious types, Ashkenazi, Mizrahi,‌ and Palestinian‌ citizens of Israel – milled around the building, united in worry ⁢and grief.

Some​ people were sure of their loved ones’ whereabouts after seeing their terrified faces in ​Hamas videos that​ appear to have been filmed inside ‍Gaza….

2023-10-08 12:44:04
Article from www.theguardian.com
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