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“He has shrapnel in his eye, he has shrapnel in his shoulder, he has shrapnel in his arm. Alon was bound in chains, this entire time, and he had almost no food — at most one pita a day, over a very, very, very long time, more than a year,” said the hostage’s mother, Idit, on Channel 12.
“And not just him — everyone who was with him: Or Levy and Eli Sharabi,” she said, naming two hostages who were released on Saturday, visibly emaciated.
Hamas terrorists abducted Ohel — a then-22-year-old pianist with plans to study jazz in Tel Aviv — alongside Or Levy and Eliya Cohen, now 27, whom Hamas is still holding captive in Gaza. Also abducted from the same bomb shelter was Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who was murdered in Hamas captivity in August 2024.
The hostages released in the ongoing, first phase of the ceasefire are limited to those considered “humanitarian” — women, children, the elderly, and the wounded and sick. Ohel was not among those to be released in this phase and is only set to be freed as part of the second stage of the deal, pending further negotiations over a permanent ceasefire and full Israeli withdrawal from the Strip.
“What is this selection?” Ohel’s mother demanded, using a word with connotations of Nazi death camps. “How is Alon, in this condition, not considered ‘humanitarian’? How is he not here with me now, with Eli and Or? I don’t understand it, and I’ll never understand it.”
“Everything you can see that Eli and Or went through, Alon is now experiencing,” Idit noted, repeatedly bursting into tears. She also said that, according to what she’s heard, her son has not received treatment for his injuries, and could only see shadows out of his wounded eye.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly declined to give Israeli negotiators a mandate to discuss the second phase of the deal, despite the passage of a deadline to begin those talks, and has appeared to keep the door open to a return to fighting — which right-wing elements of the coalition have urged — rather than the full implementation of the deal.
“I can’t fathom it. It doesn’t make sense,” Idit said, of the delegation’s lack of a mandate to carry the talks forward. Asked whether anyone from the government had reached out to her, she said no.
The mother added, “We know that Alon is strong. We know that he’s holding up. He’s from a long line of family — grandfathers and grandmothers who went through very difficult things in the Second World War. They also lost 30 kilos (66 pounds), and they survived, and started families. Alon has those roots. Alon has that inheritance. We know he’s strong.
“But we need our state. And we need the world to cry out and not allow this to continue. This is humanitarian! What you saw yesterday — that’s humanitarian!” she repeated.
Idit told Ynet on Sunday that the family still had not heard from Levy directly, but said she hopes to speak with him when he’s ready: “He needs to be with his family right now. He’s only learned just now that his wife was murdered. I want him to recover, and when the moment is right for him to speak about Alon — I would certainly love to listen, and to visit him.”
In a statement Sunday, released through the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, Ohel’s family said, “We are happy and excited to know that Alon is alive, but we are also shocked and upset over the harsh physical and mental situation Alon is in, and over the abuse that he and the rest of the hostages are still going through.
“Alon has survived that hell for this long, but he doesn’t have time! We cannot delay the release of the hostages. They are all humanitarian!” the family said.
On Monday, Ohel’s family will mark Alon’s 24th birthday at Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, and the family urged all who can make it to join them for the event.
“Alon will mark his second birthday in captivity tomorrow,” his mother said on Channel 12. “I ask, I demand, I pray — all the artists of Israel, the entire nation of Israel, come be with us, give us strength, give strength to Alon. Alon is a pianist, the country is full of pianists, come tomorrow and play the piano, send strength, send energy, send what he needs to survive this awful thing.
“Who can believe that Alon is bound in chains right now, and can’t move?! The world needs to turn upside down, and the prime minister must do everything so that Alon returns home tomorrow!” she said.
The hostage’s mother noted that, in addition to Alon’s upcoming birthday, the captive’s sister marked her own birthday on Saturday.
According to Idit, one of the released hostages delivered a happy birthday message from Alon upon his release. “It was very moving. And it’s an amazing gift for her to receive. We want the biggest gift of all, which is that Alon will come out.”
In their statement Sunday, the family called upon “the prime minister, the cabinet and the government of Israel,” saying, “time is running out.”
“We must advance the second stage of the deal and return all the hostages. Your moral obligation is to do everything you can to save Alon and the rest of the hostages,” the family said.
Seventy-three of the 251 hostages abducted by Hamas on October 7 remain in Gaza, including the bodies of at least 34 confirmed dead by the IDF.
Hamas has so far released 21 hostages — civilians, soldiers and Thai nationals — during a ceasefire that began in January. The terror group freed 105 civilians during a weeklong truce in late November 2023, and four hostages were released before that.
Eight hostages have been rescued by troops alive, and the bodies of 40 hostages have also been recovered, including three mistakenly killed by the Israeli military as they tried to escape their captors.
Hamas is also holding two Israeli civilians who entered the Strip in 2014 and 2015, as well as the body of an IDF soldier who was killed in 2014. The body of another IDF soldier, also killed in 2014, was recovered from Gaza in January.