The ceasefire agreement between Israel and
the Hamas terror group went into effect on Jan. 19 and included the
release of some of the surviving hostages kidnapped by the terrorist
group on Oct. 7, 2023. Three of these victims—Emily Damari, Romi Gonen
and Doron Steinbrecher—were returned to Israel alive in the first week
of the deal. It is to be devoutly hoped that as many as possible will
shortly be returned safe and sound to their surviving family members.
“Safe and sound,” in this case, is a relative term.
We know for a fact that many, if not all,
of the hostages have undergone ongoing abuse of nearly every conceivable
kind at the hands of their holders: sexual, physical, emotional
and psychological. We have to understand that they are not coming back
as the people they once were and that the harm they have suffered will
haunt them for the rest of their lives. Similarly, the damage that Hamas
has deliberately inflicted on both Israeli and Palestinian societies,
as well as the broader region, is deep and lasting.
Let’s not forget how the hostages were
kidnapped in the first place. On Oct. 7, 2023, thousands of Hamas
operatives and other Palestinians invaded southern Israel from the Gaza
Strip, massacring more than 1,200 people in a single day, the deadliest
day for Jews since the Holocaust. Some 364 of the slaughtered were young
people dancing at the Nova music festival, which Hamas surrounded and
infiltrated.
Many of the victims—in particular, the women and girls—were “murdered twice,” being subjected to brutal rape and genital mutilation before
they were slaughtered. Ultimately, Hamas dragged more than 250 living
captives back into Gaza, including 12 Americans. In some cases, Hamas
terrorists gained access to their victim’s social-media accounts
and live-streamed their acts of brutality. Many of the surviving
captives lost family members and friends in the most violent possible
way during the Oct. 7 attack, and many still may not know which of their
loved ones are living or dead.
Horrifically, the abuse perpetrated on the
hostages did not end with a single day of horrors. It has now been
continuing for a soul-crushing 16 months. Surviving hostages who have
been returned in earlier ceasefires have testified about being raped in
captivity. Teen hostages were forced to perform sexual acts on each
other. Terrorists also whipped the genitalia of minors. The United
Nations has described the evidence of rape and torture of hostages in
Gaza as “convincing” and have found “reasonable grounds” to suspect that
these abuses are ongoing.
Not all of the abuse has been sexual.
Hostages were kept in tiny cages in complete darkness underground. Child
hostages were deliberately branded with a heated object. Some of the
hostages were operated on by veterinarians. They were also
psychologically tortured with claims that Israel had already been
destroyed and that no one was coming to save them.
Why would anyone, even terrorist
operatives, behave with such abject cruelty toward their fellow human
beings? To understand this, one must understand Hamas’s ideology of
hate. Its founding charter commits
to the annihilation of the State of Israel and for it to be replaced
with an Islamic theocracy under Sharia law. These are not just words on a
page. Hamas-controlled Gaza has a deeply antisemitic media and
education environment, in which even children’s programming and school textbooks are full of misinformation about the alleged perfidy of Jews and calls for their annihilation.
It’s not only the traumatized hostages and
the Hamas-ruled Gazans who have been irreversibly damaged by the
terrorist group’s reign of terror. The day after Oct. 7,
Israel was attacked by
the Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah as a Hamas ally, inaugurating a
brutal war in Israel’s north that displaced tens of thousands in both
countries. Attacks on Israel continue from other terrorist factions armed by
Hamas’s sponsor, Iran, notably the Houthis, who have led an assault on global shipping through the Red Sea. (The
Houthi flag bears
the unsubtle slogan “Death to the USA, Death to Israel, Curse the Jews,
Victory to Islam.”) The ferocious war on Israel has also launched a
global surge in antisemitism, with nearly half of adults worldwide now
reporting antisemitic views. These trends have derailed efforts toward
peace, including the near-signing of a peace treaty between Israel and
Saudi Arabia.
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