Amid unthinkable carnage, a family evades Hamas gunmen.
On Oct. 7, 2023, Tibon and his wife, Miri, awoke to the “shriek” of mortar fire, which they and their two young daughters had grown accustomed to as residents of kibbutz Nahal Oz, a small Israeli community near Gaza. But after hurrying to their house’s concrete safe room, they heard distant automatic gunfire, which drew closer and confirmed their worst fears: “Hamas was coming for us.” The self-described “left-leaning” author, a reporter for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, combines a first-person account of the invasion with an informative history of the multiple attempts to secure Israeli-Palestinian peace, invariably destroyed by “extremists”—a term he uses for zealots on both sides. Tibon recounts how, after learning of the attacks, his mother and father, Gali and Noam, made the hour-long drive from their Tel Aviv home to their son’s. Upon arrival in Nahal Oz, Noam, a retired Israeli army general, was drawn into the fighting. When an Israeli soldier was mortally wounded, Noam borrowed the man’s M16 assault rifle and killed a Hamas attacker. Noam eventually reached his son’s house, where, after 10 hours in the safe room, Tibon and his family were physically unharmed. Outside the house lay “five dead bodies, all Hamas terrorists.” Fifteen Nahal Oz residents were killed; eight were kidnapped. Across Israel, more than 1,200 men, women, and children were killed. Tibon condemns Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a chaotic domestic response that poorly served Nahal Oz survivors. The author initially backed Israel’s military response but today feels it’s “extremely difficult to countenance the level of destruction caused by my own country inside Gaza,” where more than tens of thousands of Palestinians have been killed. To his dismay, Tibon finds “no leaders in this land these days.”
An Israeli journalist’s gripping narrative of the horrifying 2023 attacks on his community and country.