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Former Hostage Or Levy Describes Turning to God in Captivity

Yeshiva World News -

Former hostage Or Levy: “I used to talk to a crack in the ceiling. And then we got into the tunnel and I switched to a small LED light. And then we got to a different tunnel, and then there was only darkness. And this is when I first said the word God. And from that point on, I spoke to God.”

Watch: Mamdani Gets Worse Every Day: Miranda Devine

Matzav -

Fox News contributor Miranda Devine discusses NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani’s move to fundraise for UNRWA, despite the agency having employed staff members who were involved in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

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Watch: Argentina’s President Milei Nominates Trump for Nobel Peace Prize

Matzav -

President Donald Trump met Argentina’s President Javier Milei at the White House for a bilateral lunch focused on trade, economic reform, and strengthening U.S.-Argentina relations. The leaders discussed regional cooperation and global economic challenges. President Milei shared that he has nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.

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Kamala Harris Bizarrely Boasts She May Have Been ‘Most Qualified’ Presidential Candidate ‘Ever’

Matzav -

In a recent interview with journalist and Pivot podcast co-host Kara Swisher, Kamala Harris claimed that many people have described her as the “most qualified” person ever to run for president of the United States. The discussion, held at the Warner Theatre in Washington, D.C., focused on her 2024 campaign and her reflections since losing to President Donald Trump.

Harris told Swisher that one of the main reasons she failed to secure the presidency was that voters simply didn’t know her well enough. She suggested that Americans needed “more time to get familiar with her background” before fully understanding her qualifications.

Listing her accomplishments, Harris reminded the audience that she had served as California’s first female attorney general and as the first woman to hold the office of vice president.

“That is a decent resume, but go ahead,” Swisher interjected with a laugh.

“Well, some people have said I was the most qualified candidate ever to run for president,” Harris replied.

The remark drew loud applause from the crowd, as Harris and Swisher exchanged smiles on stage.

“I like the ‘some people say,’ very nice,” Swisher quipped.

“I’m just speaking fact,” Harris said, prompting another round of cheers.

The conversation took place as Harris continues her nationwide tour promoting her new memoir, 107 Days, which chronicles her unsuccessful presidential campaign. The event was briefly disrupted by a protester who shouted accusations of Harris being a “war criminal.”

Reflecting on her loss, Harris cited what she described as the widespread “rampant amount of mis- and disinformation that is so difficult to get in front of” as a key obstacle.

When Swisher asked what she found most challenging during her run for office, Harris pointed to her identity. “Well, I’ve always been a woman, and a woman of color, so that’s kind of [a hurdle],” she said.

Despite the setbacks, Harris’s remarks throughout the evening suggested she remains proud of her record — and confident that history will recognize her as one of the most qualified contenders to ever seek the presidency.

{Matzav.com}

Nancy Pelosi Snaps At Reporter Asking About Capitol Riot: ‘Shut Up’

Matzav -

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) lashed out at a reporter who asked why the former House speaker “refused the National Guard” on Jan. 6, 2021 as she was being assisted out of the Capitol Building Wednesday.

Pelosi, who was clutching the hand of an aide as she gingerly navigated the steps of the Capitol, quickly spun around, pointed her finger at the LindellTV reporter’s face and appeared enraged at the suggestion that a new Republican-led committee investigating the riot might find her “liable.”

“Shut up!” Pelosi, 85, barked. “I did not refuse the National Guard. The president didn’t send it. Why are you coming here with Republican talking points as if you are a serious journalist?” she fumed.

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{Matzav.com}

Freed Hostage Bar Kuperstein Says Hamas Began Feeding Him Four Days Before His Release

Matzav -

President Isaac Herzog visited freed hostage Bar Kuperstein at the hospital where he is recovering following his release from Hamas captivity. The meeting took place just a day after Kuperstein’s return to Israel.

In a video released by Herzog’s office, the president can be seen greeting Kuperstein warmly, expressing relief at his safe return and inquiring about his condition since arriving home.

“Did they begin feeding you?” Herzog asked, referring to whether Hamas had provided any food in the final days before Kuperstein’s release.

“During the last four days,” Kuperstein responded.

Herzog then reassured him, saying, “What matters is that you’re here.”

The president also took a moment to speak with Kuperstein’s father, Tal, offering him words of praise and encouragement. Tal Kuperstein, who suffered a stroke years ago following a serious car accident, had to relearn how to walk and talk while his son was being held captive in Gaza.

Meanwhile, relatives of hostages released on Monday have begun recounting the survivors’ experiences, which include reports of near-total isolation, extreme hunger, and physical abuse during their time in Hamas custody.

{Matzav.com}

Mamdani Refuses to Celebrate Release of Hostages or Gaza Ceasefire

Matzav -

New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani appeared on Fox News on Wednesday, where he refused to praise the Gaza ceasefire deal or the release of the hostages by Hamas terrorists.

The Muslim socialist, who has faced attacks labeling him an extremist and jihad supporters, stayed focused on his campaign message during his exchange with Fox News host Martha MacCallum. When pressed on whether Hamas should disarm and relinquish control in Gaza, Mamdani redirected the conversation back to local concerns.

“I believe that any future here in New York City is one that we have to make sure that’s affordable for all. And as it pertains to Israel and Palestine, that we need to ensure that there is peace, and that is the future that we fight for,” he said. “I don’t really have opinions about the future of Hamas and Israel beyond the question of justice and safety, and the fact that anything has to abide by international law. And that applies to Hamas, that applies to the Israeli military, applies to anyone you could ask me about.”

Mamdani’s appearance comes amid growing scrutiny from both local and national figures, including President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly blasted him as unfit for office and warned that New York City could lose federal funding if he wins.

During the Fox interview, Mamdani used the opportunity to address Trump directly, positioning himself as an independent-minded candidate who won’t follow the playbook of other New York politicians.

“He may be watching right now, and I just want to speak directly to the president,” Mamdani said. “I will not be a mayor like Mayor [Eric] Adams, who will call you to figure out how to stay out of jail. I won’t be a disgraced governor like Andrew Cuomo, who will call you to ask how to win this election. I can do those things on my own. I will, however, be a mayor who is ready to speak at any time to lower the cost of living.”

With that, Mamdani wrapped the interview much as he began it — keeping his focus on local issues, declining to wade into foreign policy controversies, and casting himself as a new kind of political voice in New York City.

{Matzav.com}

WATCH THIS: Mamdani Won’t Say Whether Hamas Should Lay Down Their Arms

Matzav -

Mayoral hopeful Zohran Mamdani once again refused to call on Hamas to surrender its weapons on Wednesday, while reaffirming his controversial pledge to have Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu arrested should he visit New York City.

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The Democratic candidate appeared on Fox News’ “The Story with Martha MacCallum,” where the host pressed him on his views regarding Hamas, Israel, and the cease-fire in Gaza.

MacCallum repeatedly asked Mamdani if he believed Hamas should disarm and relinquish control of Gaza — a central requirement of the agreement the terror group has rejected. Instead of giving a direct answer, Mamdani danced around the question.

The outspoken socialist attempted to change the subject, bringing up the high cost of living in New York before offering a vague response that touched on both Hamas and Israel.

“I don’t really have opinions about the future of Hamas and Israel beyond the question of justice and safety, and the fact that anything has to abide by international law,” he said.

“That applies to Hamas, that applies to the Israeli military, applies to anyone you could ask me about.”

Although he sidestepped several questions, Mamdani remained adamant that if elected mayor, he would order the NYPD to arrest Netanyahu, citing the International Criminal Court’s warrant against him — despite the fact that the United States does not recognize the ICC’s authority.

When MacCallum reminded him that the U.S. is not a party to the ICC treaty, Mamdani softened his tone, suggesting his position was rooted in moral principle rather than legal authority, and referencing the court’s similar warrant against Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“I believe that we should uphold arrests warrants by the International Criminal Court, and that we should do so only in abiding with all of the laws in front of us,” he said.

“I can tell you that I’m going to exhaust every legal option in front me, not to make new laws to do so.”

Mamdani did, however, express agreement that Hamas should “absolutely” return the remains of slain Israeli-American hostages Itay Chen and Omer Neutra.

“I have no issue with critiquing Hamas or the Israeli government because my critiques all come from a place of universal human rights,” he said.

MacCallum then asked whether he would credit President Trump for brokering the cease-fire deal — a question that visibly made him uncomfortable.

“I think it’s too early to do so,” Mamdani said. “But if it proves to be something that is lasting, something that is durable, I think that’s where you go.”

At one point, Mamdani looked straight into the camera and addressed Trump directly, responding to the president’s repeated threats to cut federal funding for New York City if he were elected. In doing so, he also took shots at current Mayor Eric Adams and former Governor Andrew Cuomo.

“I will not be not be a mayor like Mayor Adams, who will call you to figure out how to stay out of jail,” he said, referencing Adams’ dismissed federal corruption probe.

“I won’t be a disgraced governor like Andrew Cuomo, who will call you to ask how to win this election,” he continued.

“I can do those things on my own. I will, however, be a mayor who is ready to speak at any time to lower the cost of living. That’s the way that I’m going to lead this city.”

{Matzav.com}

Tamir Nimrodi, 18, Last Hostage with Unknown Fate, Confirmed Dead

Matzav -

The long search for answers about the fate of 18-year-old IDF soldier Tamir Nimrodi came to a heartbreaking end on Wednesday morning when his family confirmed that his body was among those handed over by Hamas overnight. Nimrodi, who was taken hostage from his base near the Erez Crossing on October 7, 2023, was identified following the transfer of several bodies to Israel, bringing closure to a two-year ordeal marked by uncertainty and anguish.

For nearly two years, Israel had described his condition as a matter of “grave concern.” The return of his remains on Tuesday night provided the first confirmation that he was killed while in captivity. Alongside Nimrodi, Hamas also returned the bodies of Eitan Levy and Uriel Baruch, as well as a fourth body that was later determined not to belong to any of the hostages.

In a deeply emotional interview with Channel 12, Tamir’s father, Alon Nimrodi, said he felt “fortunate” to finally have certainty about his son’s fate but emphasized that their family’s mission was not complete until all 21 of the remaining deceased hostages are brought back. “This is the moment that we so feared, the moment I refused to believe would come,” he said. “The whole time, I said if there was a 0.01% chance, I would burn the world for Tamir to come home alive and well, but unfortunately, we got the news this morning.”

When asked whether there was any relief in finally knowing, Alon said the family was struggling with a complex mix of sorrow and closure. “We, like every one of the hostage families, never had the ability to give up or relax for even a single moment,” he said. “For us, the journey ended in a terrible way — not like I had hoped — but there is a long struggle ahead for the release of 21 other hostages who are in the Gaza Strip, and we must continue to struggle until they all return home.”

He continued with painful honesty: “We feel fortunate – which is a terrible thing to say about your own son who was killed in Gaza, your eldest son who was kidnapped – but I mean to say that we are lucky to have received his body back.”

“In a certain sense, there is some relief, because there is now the certainty… there is a certain easing in knowing that our son has returned to us, even if it’s in this coffin,” he said before breaking down in tears.

Describing Tamir as his “hero,” Alon expressed immense pride in his son’s strength and spirit. He also thanked the IDF personnel who made it possible for the family to finally bring him home, saying they “allowed us to breathe right now.”

The Hostage Families Forum released a tribute highlighting Tamir’s devotion to his service. “During his service, he felt like he had found his purpose and had interviewed for officer training only a week before he was taken hostage. His friends and family say he was a social and caring man. Tamir was not supposed to be on base on October 7 but volunteered to stay for that weekend [which coincided with Simhat Torah] so his friends could celebrate the holiday at home with their families.”

After his abduction, a note written by Tamir was found in his room. It read: “Help as many people as possible, create a close social circle and don’t hurt anyone.”

He leaves behind his parents, Herut and Alon, and his sisters, Amit and Mika.

Tamir’s funeral will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. at the military cemetery in Kfar Saba. His father extended an open invitation: “Every person who Tamir touched a little come and pay final respects to my hero.”

The family released a statement Wednesday saying Tamir was “kidnapped cruelly from his base and murdered in Hamas captivity.” However, the Hostage Families Forum issued a separate statement asserting that he had been “killed by IDF bombings in captivity.”

The IDF said in its own statement that preliminary findings indicate Nimrodi was killed while being held by Hamas early in the war. “Final conclusions will be formulated after the completion of the examination of the circumstances of death” at the Abu Kabir forensic institute in Tel Aviv, the military said.

Nimrodi had served in COGAT’s Coordination and Liaison Administration to the Gaza Strip. Video footage from the attack showed him alongside Cpl. Nik Baizer and Sgt. Ron Sherman being forced by terrorists toward the base gate, dressed in shorts and T-shirts. The remains of Baizer and Sherman were later recovered by Israeli troops, who determined that both were killed in a nearby Israeli airstrike in November 2023.

{Matzav.com}

Survivors of Gaza Captivity Reveal Unimaginable Abuse and Enduring Hope

Matzav -

The stories emerging from the freed hostages are gut-wrenching — scenes of cages, chains, and pits that echo sheer brutality. After two years in Hamas captivity, the survivors, now safely back in Israel, are beginning to share the horrors they endured through their families, detailing relentless beatings, starvation, and psychological torment.

In these accounts of cruelty, there are also flashes of courage — small acts of rebellion and faith that sustained them through endless days of darkness.

At Rabin Medical Center, where several of the released hostages are being treated, families have begun to share updates about the survivors’ conditions. “We always knew he had the emotional ability to survive, but honestly, his abilities were beyond anything we could imagine,” said Idit Ohel, whose son, Alon, returned home after more than 700 days in captivity.

She explained that Alon had been living for two years with shrapnel embedded in his head and right eye, leaving his vision impaired. Surgeons expect that, with treatment, his sight can be greatly improved.

Prof. Itai Pessach, associate director-general of Sheba Medical Center, said that “every one of them has endured untold adversity and horrors, and therefore the road for recovery is going to be a very long one.”

The testimonies gathered so far reveal a pattern of severe abuse. Tami Braslavski, mother of released hostage Rom Braslavski, said her son was whipped and beaten “with things that I will not even mention” over several months. He survived, she said, because he “knew it would end.”

Avinatan Or’s father, Yaron, recounted his son’s experience of being handcuffed, confined, and punished after attempting to flee. “Avinatan tried to escape from captivity, and then they beat him,” he told Kan radio. “He was handcuffed to the bars. It was a barred place 1.8 meters [six feet] high, and the length of it was the length of the mattress, plus a little. You can call it a cage.”

The suffering was not only physical. Kobi Kalfon, father of freed hostage Segev Kalfon, broke down while describing the “horrific two years of captivity” his son had to endure, saying he still struggles to process the depth of the trauma.

Some of the worst abuse took place just before the captives’ release. Rabbi Avi Ohana, father of Yosef-Haim Ohana, said his son had been buried alive in a cramped underground pit with six other men. “They could not sit, only lean against the wall while standing. He lacked oxygen. I thank God, who made him strong. What kept him going was his family,” the rabbi said.

Yaron Or said his son spent his entire imprisonment inside a tunnel. “They didn’t starve him, but the food was scarce. He is very thin,” he said.

The captors also waged psychological warfare. Braslavski’s mother said her son was pressured to convert to Islam, with promises of better food and conditions if he complied. When he refused, they taunted him with lies that Israel had abandoned him and that the country had fallen apart. “They told him that we were broken, that we didn’t have the strength to get up and protest,” she said. “That he apparently wasn’t so important and that he had nowhere to go back to. They told him Israel had fallen, that almost 3,000 soldiers had fallen.”

Rabbi Ohana recalled that his son and another hostage were forced to listen to religious broadcasts in Arabic, but the two managed to manipulate the radio wires and pick up Israeli army broadcasts instead. There, Yosef-Haim heard his father’s voice. “He said to himself, ‘My father is alive! He is waiting for me!’ and it gave him new life,” the rabbi said.

Acts of quiet defiance became a lifeline. Tami Braslavski said her son once used fire from a terrorist’s uniform to cook pasta, surviving on half a pita a day while chained by his hands and feet. The small blaze caught attention, and though it led to his relocation, it also improved his conditions slightly.

At Sheba Medical Center, doctors are cautiously optimistic. Pessach said all ten released hostages under their care are stable. “As a physician and as a human being, I can’t emphasize enough the impact of being surrounded by their loved ones on the general well-being and their ability to heal,” he said. “They’ll probably need weeks, months and maybe years to heal, but they’ll finally be taking the first steps to return to life.”

Dr. Michal Steinman, nursing director at Rabin Medical Center, said the five hostages there are struggling with “severe but treatable nutrition problems.” She added, “The body remembers those 700-plus days of captivity and starvation. Medically, right now, we don’t have any surprises. The hostages interact, they smile. They came with a big drive to heal, recover and rehabilitate.”

Steinman said she feels “very optimistic” about their recovery. “It’s going to be a very long road, and there are going to be ups and downs, but I think each one of them developed really special techniques of survival and how to keep their mind and soul guarded,” she explained.

Family members have described the joy and disbelief that followed the captives’ homecoming. Gali and Ziv Berman, twin brothers who were held separately, were stunned to discover that they would be reunited. “We didn’t know where [the other twin] was. Suddenly, they brought him out,” Gali told President Isaac Herzog.

Idit Ohel, speaking for her family, said, “It’s up to us to ensure that the new home we build here will be a complete home, that it will be a safe home, in the deepest sense of the word.”

The overwhelming emotion of relief was evident as Sylvia Cunio, mother of released hostages David and Ariel Cunio, faced the press. Raising her fist, she declared with tears and triumph, “My children are home!”

Yotam Cohen, brother of freed soldier Nimrod Cohen, expressed both heartbreak and gratitude. He told Haaretz that his brother had endured “unthinkable atrocities,” including being held in a cage for over a year and a half, blindfolded, interrogated, and beaten. “They treated him worse because he was a soldier,” he said. Yet, seeing Nimrod’s smile after his release convinced him that “the same Nimrod returned.”

He added that the captors tried to convince the soldiers that “Israel gave up on them, that the government didn’t want to bring them back, that the country wasn’t fighting for them,” but that lie didn’t hold. Against all odds, they survived — physically battered, emotionally scarred, but unbroken.

{Matzav.com}

Hamas Knows Where Additional Remains of Murdered Hostages Are, Israeli Official Says

Matzav -

An Israeli government representative told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday that Hamas is fully aware of the locations where at least some of the bodies of the 21 hostages still unreturned are buried.

Despite this, the terror organization has repeatedly insisted that it does not know the whereabouts of all those who were killed in captivity. As recently as Wednesday night, Hamas reiterated that it has already transferred every hostage it was able to locate.

According to Hamas, finding the rest of the bodies would require “major logistical work” and advanced search tools that it claims are not currently available to them.

The Israel Defense Forces confirmed on Wednesday that the Red Cross had received the remains of two murdered hostages from Hamas.

Just one day earlier, the terror group delivered the body of a Gazan man who had aided Israel’s military in identifying Hamas tunnels, substituting him for one of the expected hostage bodies when it handed over four corpses to Israel.

“Hamas released a body that is not that of a fallen soldier. We are clear when we say this: Hamas must return all the fallen hostages; we will not compromise and will spare no effort until all the fallen are returned,” the statement read.

“Hamas committed to this before President Trump, and all the fallen must come home. Humanitarian aid has never been interrupted. For questions, please contact the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) and the IDF.”

{Matzav.com}

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