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Israeli hostage mother fights for son's life
By Michal Yaakov Itzhaki and
Maayan Lubell
October 2, 2024 12:00 PM GMT-3 Updated a day ago
Son
kidnapped with his girlfriend on Oct. 7
Mother becomes face of protest
movement seeking deal
'Never-ending nightmare'
TEL AVIV, Oct 2 (Reuters) -
On a Tel Aviv terrace at sunset, for a moment, everything seems so normal. A
girl sets her colours and paper down next to mum's coffee cup and pulls up a
chair. But mum only has a minute, she has to get back to saving her son, who is
a hostage in Gaza.
The girl's brother is Matan Zangauker, 24, who was
abducted with his girlfriend from their kibbutz home during Hamas' Oct. 7
attack.
Matan's mother, Einav, last communicated with her son at 10:08 on
that day. He sent WhatsApp messages saying: "They're breaking into the homes,"
"I love you," "don't cry" and finally - "they're getting in."
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For 10 excruciating days, as authorities were trying to
gain control amid the shock and chaos of an attack that killed 1,200 people, the
family did not know Matan's fate. Then came official notice: he was one of some
250 people abducted to Gaza.
Time for Einav has since stood still.
"For
me, the kidnapping happened yesterday morning," she says. She cannot eat or
rest, knowing he is in danger. "Matan is alive but I don't know if my fight, if
my race against time, will bring him back alive."
After giving her daughter a
quick hug, Einav is back on her phone, figuring out times for her next meetings
and protest appearances, part of a relentless campaign to save Matan and another
100 hostages still in Gaza.
'BETRAYED'
So far, 117 hostages have returned
home alive, including four released at the start of the Gaza war, 105 mostly
women, children and foreigners returned last November during a brief truce with
Hamas, and eight rescued by the military.
Thirty-seven were brought back
dead. That leaves 101 hostages still in Gaza by Israeli tallies, at least half
of whom Israeli authorities believe are still alive.
Matan's girlfriend was
among the women and children freed in the truce last November. Since then, 10
months of successive rounds of negotiations have failed to produce another truce
or free a single hostage.
Item 1 of 5 Einav Zangauker, mother of Israeli
hostage Matan Zangauker who was seized by Hamas on October 7 and remains in
Gaza, looks on as she sits in her living room during an interview with Reuters,
in Tel Aviv, Israel, September 16, 2024. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
[1/5]Einav
Zangauker, mother of Israeli hostage Matan Zangauker who was seized by Hamas on
October 7 and remains in Gaza, looks on as she sits in her living room during an
interview with Reuters, in Tel Aviv, Israel, September 16, 2024. REUTERS/Jim
Urquhart Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
From the outset, the gap
has been unbridgeable. Hamas wants negotiations to end the war, which has now
killed more than 41,500 Palestinians. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said
the war won't end before Hamas is eradicated.
Many of the families of
hostages say that uncompromising posture has made it impossible to bring their
loved ones home. Einav has become the face of a protest movement demanding
negotiations to free them now.
A single mother from a small working-class
town in southern Israel who raised Matan and his two younger sisters, Einav now
devotes every moment of her time to the campaign. She has chained herself to
fences, blocked traffic, and descended from a bridge in a cage outside Israel's
defence headquarters.
"Matan knows that his mum is no pushover and will not
give up and will fight for him until he's home," she said.
She voted for
Netanyahu, but says she now feels personally betrayed by him.
"I worshipped
him. I trusted in him. I was sure that this would be resolved very quickly, in a
very short period of time. I didn't expect it would last so long."
At weekly
protests, she is now one of Netanyahu's most blunt critics, accusing him of
choosing the survival of his coalition government, which includes parties who
object to a swap deal with Hamas, over saving the hostages.
Netanyahu denies
politics plays a part in his war policies and insists it is Hamas who is to
blame for the deadlock.
Einav says she won't give up, because Matan never
would.
"He has resolve that I have never seen. He's a young man who was
forced to take responsibility for his sisters because there was no father at
home," said Einav. "He's my man."
The hardest moments are at the start and
end of each day.
"I put my head on the pillow at night and try to sleep but
my brain and my subconscious are busy with tomorrow's fight," she says. "In the
morning, I hardly believe that I am waking up again to this never-ending
nightmare."
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