- Some 70 Hamas terrorists wielding guns and grenades stormed Kfar Aza kibbutz
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This is the heartbreaking moment an Israeli mother learns that the body of her husband has been found after he disappeared in the Kfar Aza massacre while she is being interviewed.
Shaylee Atary and her daughter Shaya escaped after more than 24 hours of hiding while Hamas terrorists tried to break into their home in the Kfar Aza kibbutz – where gunmen massacred families, including 40 children, in an attack which has sparked global outrage.
The Israeli singer was speaking to Sky News about her husband, Yahav Winner, who had been missing since the kibbutz – popular with young parents – came under attack from some 70 Hamas terrorists at dawn on Saturday.
Footage – which the family gave permission to be aired to highlight the horrors of the war which has claimed more than 2,200 lives – shows Ms Atary clutching her one-month-old newborn as she says her filmmaker husband could be ‘injured somewhere’ or ‘kidnapped’.
During the interview, Ms Atary then appears to speak to her mother, who has dropped to the floor in the hallway with her head in her hands after receiving a sickening update in a phone call from the Israel Defence Forces.
This is the heartbreaking moment that an Israeli mother learns that the body of her husband has been found during a TV interview after he disappeared in the Kfar Aza massacre
Shaylee Atary is pictured with her husband Yahav Winner and their newborn child. Yahav’s body was found
This graphic (above) shows how the horrifying Hamas massacre on the Kfar Aza kibbutz unfolded
Ms Atary found out the sickening news via her mother who had received a phone call from the IDF. Here, she is pictured with her husband
The young woman repeatedly shouts ‘Ma, Ma’ as her mother stays silent – but other family members take the newborn from her hands so she can find out what has happened.
She then starts to wail uncontrollably as relatives unite in grief and gather around her. A narrator on the video reveals that Ms Atary has just received the dreaded news that her husband has been killed.
Sky’s chief correspondent Stuart Ramsay – who was conducting the interview – said: ‘This is the horror of war. The family has allowed us to show this so that everyone understands what it is like.’
In a separate interview earlier this week, Ms Atary had revealed how she had to hide in a warehouse with her baby with no food or water for 27 hours while Hamas militants carried out a horrifying massacre.
Ms Atary said she ran into a storeroom before covering her and her baby with sacks of soil. When she heard the gunmen getting closer again, she ran across the lawn as the terrorists fired at her.
She was taken in by a family who let her hide in their saferoom, where they waited until they were rescued. ‘I really don’t know where our state was,’ she said. ‘They abandoned us. They were on Twitter. That’s where they were.’
The mother and daughter suffered smoke inhalation but they were eventually rescued by the IDF and taken to a hospital.
Mr Winner won the best cinematography prize at this year’s Tel Aviv International Students Film Festival for his short film The Boy, according to ScreenDaily.com.
The terror at Kfar Aza began just after dawn when most of the 400 residents living there were sleeping or enjoying their breakfast with coffee.
The first wave of 70 terrorists had roared towards the quiet kibbutz on motorbikes after tearing through the border wire a mile away, while others paraglided over Israel’s unsuspecting defences from Gaza.
In a separate interview earlier this week, Ms Atary (with husband) had revealed how she had to hide in a warehouse with her baby with no food or water for 27 hours while Hamas militants carried out a horrifying massacre
Ms Atary (R) is an Israeli singer while Yahav Winner (L) was a filmmaker. He is understood to have won the best cinematography prize at this year’s Tel Aviv International Students Film Festival, according to ScreenDaily.com
Israeli soldiers walk beside the bodies of Hamas militant killed in Kfar Aza kibbutz on Tuesday
Troops remove the bodies of victims, killed during an attack by Hamas terrorists in Kfar Aza, on Tuesday
As soon as they arrived, the heavily armed fighters attacked the compound from four directions – starting with the ‘baby quarter’ on the west side where all the young families lived.
The terrorists were met by a frantic kibbutz guard, a small group of residents with military experience, who were patrolling the perimeter when they saw the swarm of black figures racing towards them.
They – like the Israeli military and government – were not prepared for the wave of terrorists firing streams of bullets at them. The small security squad tried in vain to protect their neighbours but they couldn’t hold the terrorists off and were killed in the fighting.
The ruthless Hamas gunmen moved quickly through the kibbutz, first killing a 90-year-old grandmother who had been sitting on her porch when the terrorists arrived. They dragged the terrified pensioner into her living room and shot her twice in the head.
Families were woken to the terrifying sound of gunfire and voices outside their homes. Terrified parents ran to their sleeping children and pulled them from their beds and cots before bundling them into saferooms or cupboards.
Among those parents were Itay and Hadar Berichevsky, both 30, who heard the gunmen trying to smash down their front door.
The terrified parents frantically put their ten-month-old twin babies into a hidden shelter moments before the Hamas terrorists stormed into their home and shot the couple dead.
Ms Atary (with husband who was found dead) said she ran into a storeroom before covering her and her baby with sacks of soil. When she heard the gunmen getting closer again, she ran across the lawn as the terrorists fired at her
Itay and Hadar Berdichevsky (pictured with babies), both 30, had mere seconds to react when they heard the gunmen trying to smash down their front door
The terrified parents frantically bundled their two babies into a hidden shelter moments before Hamas terrorists shot the couple dead
The terrorists then moved systematically from home to home, blowing open front doors with their rocket-powered grenades and unleashing a hail of bullets at the men, women and children living there. Entire families had been handcuffed before they were shot point blank one by one, soldiers said.
It would later emerge that as many as 40 babies and young children were massacred in this kibbutz, some of them beheaded, according to Israeli soldiers who spoke to news channel i24. Harrowing images from the scene show a baby’s car seat covered with blood, her small bloodied dress lying next to it.
The Hamas gunmen set fire to several homes in the kibbutz in a sick attempt to force the families out so that they could gun them down as soon as they reached their garden.
‘Many preferred to die in the fires, than be killed by the terrorists,’ Omar Barak, a 24-year-old Israeli army officer, told the Times of Israel.
Some had tried to flee the terrorists, but many were gunned down mercilessly – their bodies lying on the grass in front of their homes.
One survivor told EuroNews: ‘The terrorists came into every home, into every home, every place. They would burn their house with them inside so they would die.
‘They shot children, babies, old people, anyone. No one was safe from it. The first victim was a 90-year-old woman who was sitting on her porch. She saw them coming and she got shot.’
Hamas terrorists beheaded babies and gunned down entire families in their homes in a small kibbutz in Israel, Israeli soldiers have claimed
An IDF soldier covers his face before removing the body of a civilian killed days earlier in an attack by Hamas terrorists on Tuesday
Israeli soldiers search for the bodies of Israelis killed in Kfar Aza kibbutz near the border with Gaza on Tuesday
A soldier is overcome with emotion as he searches for bodies in the kibbutz
The attack was so quick and coordinated that the coffee from their Saturday morning breakfast was still on the table in one family’s home. Blood and cracked cups covered their kitchen floor.
It took the Israeli army 12 hours to reach the kibbutz, said officer Davidi Ben Zion, the deputy commander of paratrooper team Unit 71.
But the carnage didn’t end there. The terrorists fought hard to keep control of the kibbutz, killing civilians and firing bullets at the soldiers.
Soldiers told the BBC how it was ‘chaos, terrorists everywhere’ as soon as they arrived in the kibbutz. ‘You cannot imagine how difficult the fighting was,’ one said.
It took Israeli soldiers three days to recapture the kibbutz, shooting dead the Hamas terrorists.
Israeli soldiers went from home to home, hoping to find survivors.
Astonishingly, the ten-month-old twin babies bundled into a hidden shelter by Itay and Hadar Berdichevsky were rescued by Israeli soldiers and taken to their grandmother.
Israeli soldiers patrol burned and destroyed houses after the attack by Hamas
A charred house after an attack by Palestinian terrorists on the kibbutz on Tuesday
A house left in ruins after an attack by Hamas militants on this kibbutz days earlier when dozens of civilians were killed near the border with Gaza on Tuesday
A dead civilian lies under a blanket outside a house in the kibbutz near the border with Gaza on Tuesday
What is left of the utter carnage that the Hamas terrorists unleashed on this small community is the bullet-riddled bodies of parents and their children and the charred remains of their homes.
Throughout the town, walls and torched cars are riddled with bullet holes, tracing a path of violence that continues inside to bedrooms with mattresses spattered in blood, safe rooms that could not withstand the attack
There were so many victims, feared to be around 150, that soldiers and the mortuary teams spent hours collecting all of their bodies. They wrapped the small bodies of young children butchered by the terrorists, before placing them into body bags that were too large.
The Israeli soldiers were seen comforting each other after witnessing such horrors, including the bodies of entire families who were gunned down in their beds.
‘You see the babies, the mothers, the fathers in their bedrooms and how the terrorists killed. It’s not a battlefield. It’s a massacre,’ Israeli Major General Itai Veruv said as he stood at the entrance of the kibbutz.
Missiles launched from the Gaza Strip toward the Israeli city of Ashkelon interrupted by the Israeli air defense system of Iron Dome, 10 October 2023
The remains of a supermarket which was struck by Hamas rocket attacks this afternoon
A survivor, surrounded by shattered glass and burned-out cars, inspects the debris
Smoke billows from a burning building after the rocket attacks which targeted multiple cities across Israel
‘I’ve served as a combat soldier and officer for 39 years,’ Veruv continued. ‘I’ve never seen anything that comes close to this. It’s not even something that our parents knew. This is something out of the world of our grandfathers back in Europe, from the pogroms and the Holocaust.
Veruv had arrived at Kfar Aza on Saturday to join the fighting but on Tuesday he gathered the world’s press to show them what happened there.
‘When I discovered what had happened here, I remembered how General Eisenhower, when the American army liberated concentration camps in Germany, immediately brought the media so the world would know,’ Veruv said, his eyes red.
The stench of bodies was heavy in the air as the soldiers showed journalists the kibbutz, popular amongst families. The small football nets where children would have played football were seen on a pocket of grass – but in the background, the bodies of families were laid on the ground.
Major David Ben Zion, 37, a reservist called up to try to rescue any survivors, told The Independent: ‘We saw dead babies, girls. We succeeded in saving some of them but we found most dead in their houses. They came with just one mission – to kill more and more of our people.’
Outside one of the small houses of the kibbutz. the body of a resident was covered by a purple sheet with a bare foot protruding. A pillow and other objects from the house lay scattered.
Elsewhere bodies of the gunmen lay face down on the ground. A destroyed gate at the perimeter of the kibbutz showed where the gunmen had entered.
Military spokesman Maj Doron Spielman compared the toll in Kfar Aza and nearby villages he visited to scenes he witnessed as a New Yorker after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
An Israeli army self-propelled howitzer fires rounds near the border with Gaza in southern Israel on October 11
‘I remember going through 9/11 and waking up the next day, the next week, and everything had changed,’ he said. ‘It’s the same thing again. But worse because we’re such a small country.’
The threat didn’t end with the Hamas terrorists being shot dead. Soldiers took 30 to 40 minutes going through each home due to the number of unexploded grenades strewn across the floor.
And soldiers were still securing the paths of the kibbutz, which had single-storey houses with verandas, palm trees and banana plants, as bursts of gunfire and explosions could be heard in the distance.
In one part of the kibbutz, where residents had kept the lawns tidy outside their modest homes, lay the ruins of a motorised glider used by the militants to fly over the border. Next to it lay a crumpled Hamas flag in the dirt.
Kfar Aza, surrounded by farms and just a few minutes down a country road from the heavily fortified fence Israel erected around Gaza, was one of more than 20 towns and villages attacked by Palestinian fighters early Saturday.
For the younger soldiers who had fought their way through the kibbutz, they were unable to talk about what they saw.
‘We have a long war ahead of us now,’ one soldier said. ‘There will be time to come to terms with what we saw here after the war.’
Today, residents in Gaza were facing ever-growing uncertainty after the territory’s only power plant ran out of fuel and shut down.
Israeli airstrikes further demolished entire neighbourhoods and sent people scrambling to find safety. And hospitals in the Gaza Strip are struggling to treat the injured with dwindling medical supplies.
The war, which has claimed more than 2,200 lives on both sides, is expected to escalate.
The weekend attack that Hamas said was retribution for worsening conditions for Palestinians under Israeli occupation has inflamed Israel’s determination to crush the group’s hold in Gaza.
The Israeli military said more than 1,200 people, including 155 soldiers, have died in Israel since Saturday’s incursion.
In Gaza, the health ministry says more than 1,050 have been killed and more than 5,100 injured. The United Nations Palestinian refugee agency says 250,000 people have been displaced in Gaza.
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