After 482 days in captivity of Hamas, the Israeli hostages Arbel Yehud, Gadi Moses and Agam Berger returned to their homes on Thursday, revealing painful details of their ordeal – including how they hung on their faith, refusing to eat lea bread On the Passover and trying to fast on their faith, refusing to eat lefa bread on passover and try to fast on their conflict, refusing to eat lefa bread on passover and try to throw away the faith, refusing to eat bread lefa on passover and try to throw to throw to fix, refusing to eat lea bread on passover and try to accelerate in fasting on the faith yom kippour, despite the cruelty of their captors.
Nahal Oz’s TSAhal observers, including Agam Berger, have made a conscious effort to observe Jewish traditions even when they are detained underground and in the apartments controlled in Hamas in Gaza, Ynet reported.
Despite the disastrous conditions, they refused to eat Chametz (sourdough bread) at Passover and tried to fast on Yom Kippour, a difficult task given the severe malnutrition they have suffered.
Berger, the last observer of Tsahal to be released, said that Faith’s maintenance had given him forces. She had remained alone in captivity for a full week after her comrades Liri, Daniella, Naama and Karina were released. She would have comforted to know that they had been released and kept the hope that she would be next, according to Kan News.
482 days of isolation
For almost 16 months, Arbel Yehud was held in full isolation, underground for long periods. She suffered from serious malnutrition, had a minimum of food and suffered a cruel treatment of her kidnappers.
According to Kan News, Yehud was informed in captivity that his brother, Dolev Yehud, had been murdered during the October 7 attack on Nir Oz. However, she remained ignorant of the full scale of the massacre. “I was mainly alone,” she said after her release.
“What you have seen today – the armed men vanishing me – it’s just a fraction of horror,” she said about thousands of terrorists who surrounded him in Khan Yunis, While being transferred to the Red Cross on the way back to Israel.
Gadi Moses: “I have never broken, I never cried”
Gadi Moses, 80, spent his captivity to focus on the day he returned home to rebuild his community. “I have never broken, I never cried-I just waited until I was free,” he told his family, as Kan News reported.
Moses saw his relatives on television, including images on Al Jazeera, but had no contact with them. Like Yehud, he was tested mentally and physically throughout his captivity but refused to lose hope.