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Released Israeli hostage recounts hunger, chains that 'cut into your flesh'
Eli Sharabi, who was held hostage in Gaza for more than 490 days, has recounted his suffering in captivity in a televised interview, an extract of which was posted on social media by Israel's foreign ministry Friday.
"For a year and four months my legs were shackled with chains with very, very heavy locks that cut into your flesh," Sharabi said in the interview broadcast late Thursday on Israel's Channel 12.
He spoke of intense hunger, food deprivation and the days when the only thing to eat was "this quarter of a pita that you can finish in three bites".
"You eat it for 10 minutes, 15 minutes, crumb by crumb, to really feel that you've eaten something," he said in the interview.
Sharabi, now 53, was at his home in kibbutz Beeri with his British-born wife Lianne and their two teenage daughters when Hamas stormed it on October 7, 2023 in the attack on Israel that triggered the war in Gaza.
He was released on February 8 with two other Israelis as part of an exchange for Palestinian prisoners under the truce that came into effect on January 19.
The frail, disoriented appearance of the three men sparked dismay and shock in Israel and beyond.
It was only after his release that Sharabi learned that his wife and two teenage daughters had been killed on October 7, 2023.
His brother, Yossi Sharabi, was taken hostage separately and is still in Gaza, presumed dead.
"Contrary to what one might think, I'm not angry," Eli Sharabi told Channel 12.
"I'm lucky I had Lianne for 30 years and our two amazing daughters for years, I'm lucky they didn't kill me," he said.
Sharabi recalled that one day in captivity, his guard "learned that Israeli planes had destroyed his family's house".
"I was the first one to get it. Kicks, punches, to the ribs," he said.
"He was starved. Beaten. Tortured -- physically and mentally," Israel's foreign ministry said in a post on X Friday which included an extract from the interview.
"For 491 days, he was held hostage in unimaginable conditions, completely cut off from the outside world," it said.
Sharabi said he gave the almost hour-long interview for the hostages still being held in Gaza so that they could be brought back as soon as possible.
W.Stewart--AT