'Hold on to Hope, Pray You'll Get Out': Former Hostage Arbel Yehoud Speaks on Her Time in Captivity
- Arbel Yehoud was held captive in the Gaza Strip for 482 days, facing hunger and isolation, and she emphasized the importance of hope during her captivity.
- Keith Samuel Siegel described enduring severe conditions during his 484 days in captivity and noted the ongoing suffering of hostages and their families.
- He stated that separation from family was one of the most painful parts of imprisonment, calling it a form of torture as they had no knowledge of his condition.
- Both Arbel and Siegel urged decision-makers to prioritize the safe return of all hostages, highlighting the moral obligation to rescue them as a nation.
12 Articles
12 Articles
In a new memoir, a released Israeli hostage searches for meaning after losing everything
'I Love Life, I Crave Life' | In Hie New Book, 'Hostage,' the Released Israeli Hostage Shares His Dark Days in Gaza. He Writes That He Wished to Survive for His Wife and Daughters – Unaware That They Had Been Killed by Hamas Terrorists on October 7. But Also 'For Me, for Eli Sharabi, I Want to Live'
Former hostage reveals horrific torture witnessed in Gaza captivity
Half a year following his release from Gaza captivity, Keith Samuel Siegel gave an interview Sunday morning to Niv Raskin on Channel 12. The captivity survivor, abducted on October 7 and detained for 484 days in the Strip, disclosed details regarding the unbearable conditions under which hostages remain confined. "Ever since my return, I find it challenging to employ the term 'challenging,' because my thoughts turn to the fifty individuals there…


Talks about a ceasefire in Gaza are continuing. And hostages are still trapped in Hamas tunnels. Thousands of people have demonstrated for release in Israeli cities.
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