Family Members: Hostages Ate Poorly, Slept on Benches
Nov 26, 2023 20:15:13 GMT -5
Post by J.J.Gibbs on Nov 26, 2023 20:15:13 GMT -5
Family Members: Hostages Ate Poorly, Slept on Benches; Waited up to Two Hours for Bathroom
Ohad Monder, who turned 9 years old in captivity, is reunited with relatives after being held by the Palestinian terrorist organization Hamas for 49 days in Gaza. (Schneider Children's Hospital)(Schneider Children's Hospital)
JOEL B. POLLAK
26 Nov 2023
Family members of released Israeli hostages told reporters Sunday that the hostages had been forced to sleep on benches during their seven-week captivity; that they had to endure waits of up to two hours for the bathroom; and that they were sometimes denied food.
Adva Adar, granddaughter of freed Holocaust survivor Yaffa Adar, 85; and Merav Mor Raviv, cousin of Keren Munder, 54, spoke to reporters in a press conference organized by MediaCentral Jerusalem.
Coming Home: Adva Adar, Granddaughter of Released Hostage Yaffa Adar, in First Online Up from MediaCentral on Vimeo.
Adar said that her grandmother had counted the days of her captivity, and that she had lost weight during her time as a hostage.
Raviv added:
They were eating, but not regularly, and not all the time. Keren told me that there were days that they didn’t get food, only pita bread or things like that. They lost — Keren and her mom, Ruthie, lost, each one of them, around, between six to eight kilos, and they are not that tall. They ate a lot of rice and bread …. I know that she told me that when they wanted to go to the bathroom, how they had to knock on the door, and sometimes, and then they were waiting [for] it to be opened, and sometimes they were waiting one and-a-half hours, or two hours, to go to the bathroom. And they told me that they were sleeping on kind of benches in a reception room, that you have three chairs combined as a bench, they had to sleep on that kind of, to spend their night on the bench.
Raviv added that the hostages looked as if they had lost weight, even though most were said to be in good physical condition.
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Ohad Monder, who turned 9 years old in captivity, is reunited with relatives after being held by the Palestinian terrorist organization Hamas for 49 days in Gaza. (Schneider Children's Hospital)(Schneider Children's Hospital)
JOEL B. POLLAK
26 Nov 2023
Family members of released Israeli hostages told reporters Sunday that the hostages had been forced to sleep on benches during their seven-week captivity; that they had to endure waits of up to two hours for the bathroom; and that they were sometimes denied food.
Adva Adar, granddaughter of freed Holocaust survivor Yaffa Adar, 85; and Merav Mor Raviv, cousin of Keren Munder, 54, spoke to reporters in a press conference organized by MediaCentral Jerusalem.
Coming Home: Adva Adar, Granddaughter of Released Hostage Yaffa Adar, in First Online Up from MediaCentral on Vimeo.
Adar said that her grandmother had counted the days of her captivity, and that she had lost weight during her time as a hostage.
Raviv added:
They were eating, but not regularly, and not all the time. Keren told me that there were days that they didn’t get food, only pita bread or things like that. They lost — Keren and her mom, Ruthie, lost, each one of them, around, between six to eight kilos, and they are not that tall. They ate a lot of rice and bread …. I know that she told me that when they wanted to go to the bathroom, how they had to knock on the door, and sometimes, and then they were waiting [for] it to be opened, and sometimes they were waiting one and-a-half hours, or two hours, to go to the bathroom. And they told me that they were sleeping on kind of benches in a reception room, that you have three chairs combined as a bench, they had to sleep on that kind of, to spend their night on the bench.
Raviv added that the hostages looked as if they had lost weight, even though most were said to be in good physical condition.
link