 You're going to be shocked when you hear this next story. I came to Kfar Azar to meet Yuri Yuri managed to escape Hamas after he was captured by the terrorists. He had one second to decide what to do. Take left to Gaza and be captured or try to escape. Let's see what happens. Let's go meet him. Peace be upon you. You know, it's really crazy. I was in the parking lot right now and for me before I came here it looked normal, almost normal. But then you come here and you see the atrocities. What happened in the 7th of October? You saw everything. I saw, hear, feel everything that happened here, to all of my community, to all of my friends. Can you take me to the point where it all began? Yes. Where were you? Where is your house? Let's go. This is the neighborhood that's called the Dador Tzahir, the younger generation of the people of the Kibbutz. So this is my was my house. It's completely destroyed. 7th of October. What time we start? Sixth morning. Sixth in the morning. I wake up. Yeah. I need to go to run with my friend to a gym. I don't know why. Miracle, I decided that I'm not going. All the people. Yeah. It was running into the road, was killed, was murdered. But where are we right now? Are we inside my house? This is the kitchen. That's the kitchen. This was the kitchen, yes. There's the refrigerator. Here's the place that I was cooking and everything is destroyed. That's bathroom here, right? That's bathroom, shower. This is one of my corner of the Kadanin room. I was here, couch, TV. Look at this. It's like look how many bullets I have in my door. Wow! And they shoot on my door when I was inside my bedroom. I was here the shooting all over the place and my door and my window and my friends in my neighborhood and the street outside. I hear also civilians screaming and this moment I was in the stand that they kidnapped the people from our kibbut. The most scurried situation that I was in my life. Because it's very scurried and very dangerous, so I go down below my bed. I was under the bed. It was here some basket and some some couple of bags. You covered yourself. And I covered myself. I saw all of the message and the WhatsApp group. All the people was they haven't done and they house a Hamas terrorist and they screaming to help from somebody and nobody answered and nobody coming and I'm texting also come to help me. And after a couple of seconds they spilled something into my house and I started to hear my house going on fire. I cannot breathe and when I started in the standard that I cannot breathe. I take this pillow and I take the sheets from the pillow. I rape at that and I do a mask to myself because I cannot breathe. They throw grenades inside my house. So the grenade broke the door. And the fire go inside to my bedroom. I decided that I am not dying in the fire. So if it will the fire will go inside to my bedroom, I will jump out. I try to open this window and it doesn't open and I will go out like that. And I saw a three terrorist that was like that. And I don't have not and I have only a boxer. And I'm taking my hands up to show them that I don't come in to fight with them. One put into my face. Kalachnikov. Another one where you're standing now with a knife, big knife doing like that with the hand and screaming on me. After one moment they just push me out from the window like this down to the ground. They just pushing me in a brutality way. Did they hit you? They're just pushing me to here. They're screaming between themselves. I think that was that they talk about what to do with me and then they understand that they decided that they kidnapped me. They just take me like that with the hands and pushing me like in a very fast way. In this moment, they understand that I don't doing nothing. So they go back to my neighborhood to continue killing. They take him in my hand here. One hand, yes, one hand like that. And the other hand he was a shovel. I'm understood in this moment that if he's taking me outside of the border, I'm going to be kidnapped. So this is the moment that I understand that I don't have a chance. 90% that they will kill me when I'm trying to do something. But I have maybe 10% that I will succeed. Yes, I'm surviving. So I take in my hand doing like that and start running. You're barefoot. You don't have shoes on. Nothing. You have only your underwear. Only. And you're running like crazy. He starts to run after me and starts to yell to the terrorist with the gun to come shoot me. You understand? I think that you don't have a chance to catch me because I want, like you said, I run for your life. Yep. I need to save myself and I need to listen. If I hear more civilians around me, I can smell all the way death. This is the situation. Like in any moment, I can be the next one. Any moment, they can shoot me. So in this moment, I saw this bush. I decided that this is the place that I can escape to him. So I just go inside here and sit like that inside. And you hide like this for three hours. What happened after three hours? So after three hours, I go out like that with my hands because I hear Hebrew from this corner. So I was going just like that and yelling to them, hey, that I'm Jew soldier. And they almost shoot me. They didn't understand what I'm doing in the middle of the kibbutz. Naked. Yeah. Because they saw me with underwear. So they understand at this moment that I'm not coming to do nothing. And then I tell them that I have a friend that live upstairs. And I tell them, take me up. I will stay with them in the safe room. So three soldiers going with guns, cleaning the building. I'm back in the middle and two more behind me going like that. Like you see here, they close it, but everything was glass broken here. The door was open. Like you see in the world. You can see everything here with a lot of them. Look inside. Look inside the houses. They managed to put you in the safe room with your friend. Yep. And they went back to fight. Yep. And all the time you hear everything. Everything. 8 p.m. when the soldier come to this building and they knock on the door, they talk with us in Hebrew. So we understood that this soldier of us, but it's only the beginning because between 8 p.m. to 8 in the morning, they was shooting all over the place. And they was take people downstairs to our apartment to be together. And 8 a.m. they telling us five minutes we going out from the kibbutz. That's more than 24 hours, no? Almost 26. 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. And the moment that I will feel safety outside of the kibbutz, I call to my brother and I start to cry on the phone. And I tell them one thing, I'm alive.