An IDF soldier who took part in the operation to locate the body of Ran Gvili described the intense emotions that swept through the forces involved, recounting the dramatic moments surrounding the final identification at a burial site in Gaza.
The news of the recovery of Ran Gvili’s body, announced at 2:50 p.m. on Monday, sent a wave of emotion through hundreds of soldiers and professionals who had been operating in the area. One of the fighters who participated in the mission described the scene in stark terms. “It’s impossible to describe what happened here; crying, shouting, unbelievable,” he said, adding simply: “Everyone here is crying.”
According to the soldier, the complex operation focused on what he called “a massive cemetery with thousands of bodies.” Due to the scale of the site and the number of remains, the forces were required to develop independent capabilities in the field. “We developed our own technology,” the soldiers testified, describing the methods used to cope with the enormity of the task.
The work was carried out at a rapid and methodical pace under intense time pressure, with teams operating continuously. “We worked nonstop from yesterday afternoon, 24 hours,” the soldier recounted, noting that the effort involved examining approximately 350 bodies before reaching the long-sought identification.
Hundreds of soldiers from the Alexandroni Brigade took part in the operation, alongside extensive medical and religious support teams. “There are 24 doctors here, it’s like a factory,” the soldier said, describing the organized process on site. The mission combined sensitive engineering and explosive-ordnance work, with nine excavators operating alongside fighters from the Yahalom unit. According to testimony from the field, the unit’s fighters carried out “bomb clearance before every grave, and then the rabbanut personnel enter.”
The recovery came after forces mapped and marked roughly 900 potential bodies, a figure that, according to those involved, underscores the complexity of the mission, as it represents only “about 5%” of all those buried at the vast site.
“It’s impossible to describe what happened here. Crying, shouting, unbelievable,” the soldier concluded emotionally, summing up the atmosphere following the identification.
{Matzav.com}