Former Hamas hostage details horrors of captivity, credits kidnapped IDF soldier with saving her life

Former Hamas hostage details horrors of captivity, credits kidnapped IDF soldier with saving her life

Former Hamas hostage Amit Soussana is sharing more details about her time in captivity, and she says there was another hostage who was instrumental in her survival. Liri Albag, one of the IDF soldiers who was kidnapped on Oct. 7, "saved" Soussana.

Speaking on Israeli TV, Soussana recalled her captors tying her up and beating her, demanding that she admit to being in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). Soussana says her hands and feet were bound, and she was beaten with a stick before one of the captors pointed a gun at her and said, "You have 40 minutes to tell us the truth, or else I kill you."

Amit Soussana

In March 2024, Soussana became the first Israeli woman to speak publicly about being sexually assaulted while in Hamas captivity. She recalled the horrifying incident in an interview with The New York Times. Soussana later testified before the UN Security Council in October 2024 about her experience.

Amit Soussana speaking

During her captivity, Soussana was chained by her ankle, unable to move. "I had to ask for permission to use the bathroom," she explained, detailing her experience. "In that house, I was sexually assaulted by the Hamas terrorist who had guarded me."

She described the assault, saying, "He forced me to go to the shower and entered the room, pointed his gun at me. He was breathing heavily and had a monstrous beast-like face." She recalled his intrusive questioning while he sat next to her in his underwear, lifting her shirt and touching her. "I knew exactly what he was planning to do, and yet I couldn't do anything to prevent it. I was utterly helpless."

Soussana said that after the assault she was not "allowed to cry or to be sad." She recalled feeling isolated and being "forced to act nice to the person who had just sexually assaulted me."

Israel and Hamas have been engaged in a deadly war for over 15 months following the terror group's devastating surprise attacks on Oct. 7, 2023. Hamas is expected to release Agam Berger, Arbel Yehoud and 80-year-old Gadi Moses on Jan. 30 as part of the current ceasefire deal with Israel.

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