 100 days, 100 days since October 7th, but here in Kibbutz Niroz time is standing still. You can still find the remnants of the paradise. It used to be, but more than all else, of the burning hell it had become. And joining us now, Irritlav, residents of Kibbutz Niroz, a Kibbutznik. Where are we? What are we seeing here? This is the house of Nili Margalit and Tamar Kedem Simantov. Nili Margalit was kidnapped, abducted, and she was released some 50 days ago. And Tamar Kedem Simantov and Johnny Simantov with the three children were murdered on October 7th. A family that was completely erased? Yes, not only them. Johnny's mother Carol also. Six members of one family, grandmother, parents, and little children. All completely erased? Murdered, yes. Let's try to get a clear sense of what happened here. Even 100 days later it is still impossible to understand minute by minute what exactly happened. But you woke up on a Saturday morning in your beloved home. To what? We had the color red missile allowed. We ran in our pajamas, jumped out of bed. We have 10 seconds to run to shelter. We did. Me and my daughter closed the door. Another missile allowed. My daughter ran out to get the dog in, grabbed luckily my cell phone, and we were there for 11 and a half hours. Two minutes later after that, those first alarms, constant automatic weapon and missiles, grenades, RPGs. We knew that the terrorists are attacking the Kibbutz. They were roaming those little paths here between the houses where kids used to... Hundreds. Hundreds of terrorists. Three and four hundred terrorists invaded the Kibbutz. And there was constant automatic weapon shooting 6.35 a.m. until four in the afternoon. And we are helplessly trying to keep the doors closed because we knew that they're going door to door, door to door, killing... Every single one of you protecting their own house. Yes, yes, yes. And when did you realize that every single house here was going through the same? Very early in the morning, seven-ish people started texting in the Kibbutz's messaging system. People started writing. They're attacking our house. They're burning our house. I'm injured. I'm going to die. Please help. Please help from all corners of the Kibbutz. And of course we're here. It's very clear. It's very obvious. And it's one in four. One in four, no matter how many times I'm repeating this number in my head. One in four Kibbutz members were killed. Either killed or kidnapped, yeah. There were 417 people, including babies and children and elderly people, living that day in the Kibbutz. And 117 were either murdered or kidnapped. So it's more than one in four. And you know, we're standing here talking and you're explaining very clearly what happened here. And this is essentially what you've been doing since October 7th. For the past 100 days, this is what you've been doing. Showing people what happened. Yes, I want the word to know. It's very important because it's unimaginable. I think even in movies you don't see such atrocities, such violence and hatred. And you know, kidnapping babies, killing a whole family. This is not something you even don't see in movies. But after explaining that time and time again for 100 days, do you understand what happened here? Do you realize? No, no. It's hard to even fathom. Many times I think to myself, did I just imagine this? Maybe it didn't really happen. Hoping, hoping. But I know, of course I know it happened. To wake up from this nightmare. No, neither one of us is able to wake up. It's terrible. Rita Lav, thank you very much. May we meet here again in 100 days and start talking about what will become of Niroz and not what we've lost. It's hard to imagine. Hi. Welcome to this special broadcast here in Kibbutz, Niroz, 100 days since October 7th. And we are here. And on our way here, I was looking through the car window at those evergreen, endless meadows with those beams of sunlight through the clouds. It's this type of beauty that strikes you. And then you start seeing the names. Kfaraza, Anirim, and Reim, and Bari, and Niroz. And you walk in this beautiful Kibbutz, this piece of paradise on earth. And you prepare yourself to face death. And what you see here in between the burnt houses in this devastating scenery of loss, what you see here is not death, but rather something even more painful. And this is the absence of life. You see the life that we're thriving here and you see their absence. And we are here tonight with Amit Siman Tavaaba and Mo Tsarfati Balakhtan, in our very own I-24 News Senior, a defense correspondent, Jonathan Regiff. And Amit and Mo, before our broadcast, she showed us your house, your homes, not your houses, your homes. Born here, raised here, raising children here, neighbors, sharing a balcony. And we were walking through your houses and between the ashes we saw piles of laundry that were not even folded yet, because life were so vivid, were so present. And then a second, there's no laundry to fold anymore. No laundry to fold, no houses to clean, no food to make. Yes, it is devastating. It's even more devastating to think about how in one second, in 6.30 on Saturday morning, our whole life changed 180 degrees and there's nothing we can do about it. Just flow with it. Nothing will ever be the same again. And it's not even the death that actually happened. It's the death of, like you described it, the absent of life that I feel that lots of my friends feel. And we will talk more about the fact that you still, 100 days later, united as a community, but before we get to that, Amit, again, 100 days since, but are we talking now or are we still then? It's a very good question, because on one hand I feel every day that we are still on October 7th. We remember it very well. Our kids keep reminding us stuff that we even forgot about that happened the same day. And because nothing happened, nothing is the same. So as I said tomorrow, like we're never going to sit together in this balcony again and share our morning coffee. So even if we are sharing coffee again the last few days. It's always in contrast of the coffee that you will not be sharing. Yes, exactly. And yes, it feels terrible. In one hand being, like, leaving all over again every day, the October 7th, and having our hearts with people who are not here let's do try to go back to October 7th. Because we're talking about hours and hours and hours of you, both of you mothers of children with your kids in the safe room. And there's no other way to put it. Fighting for your lives. Absolutely. Yes. We were sitting in the safe room with our kids and the the terrorists came in and out more than once, more than twice. They screamed they were happy. They came with all of their villages, women, children. Wait, so you're sitting with your kids in the safe room what, 7, 8 a.m. in the morning after the attack began at 6.30 and you hear people celebrating right outside of the safe room? Yes. Right inside my house, outside of the safe room, yeah. Inside my house. Making a mess out of my house and living in it. Like actually living in my house when I'm locked in the safe room with my family and my dog is trying and they keep holding her mouth not to do it so they won't hear us. They were shooting at the door and they were bombing stuff inside the house and eventually they set the house on fire we could hear everything the paper making like a small fireplace spilling the gas trying to set it on fire yeah while we're sitting inside breathing the smoke of our own house our own lives we couldn't even see each other my husband sets in front of me we couldn't even see him because of the smoke and they hear it's a decision between suffocating or heading out and risking being shot this is just at some point I decided I told my husband I'm not going to suffocate to death I will be killed to death I'd rather get shot than not breathe so I open the window and we heard the gunshots outside it was like like a crazy war bombs and fire guns and everything and and I thought the army is outside I I assumed it was a war actually going on outside so I decided we're going to stay inside and not go outside and that's what we did every second someone is going to come and meanwhile not far away we visited and we opened the broadcast our brother's house not far away from there your brother his family fighting for their lives too yes we were as I said we were in the shelter room in the house from 6 am in the morning and around 5 minutes before 7 we already got messages saying people in the kibbutz they're carrying a lot of gunfire and that we need to stay inside and lock ourselves inside immediately we understood that we can't go out we can't go out not even to get water inside the shelter room or anything we're going to stay inside and lock ourselves as the best we can and we started texting to everyone are you okay, where are you are you safe in the shelter room what's going on of course my family group on whatsapp at one point I was asking maybe we should all go to be together just let's go outside and be together just let's be in one house together in one shelter room and maybe we can do something as a group and not each family by yourself but my brother Johnny he wrote mithy please stay home please stay in the shelter don't leave to go outside just be quiet and stay inside and around 9.45 in the morning his wife texted in one of our groups that they have been shot and then a minute after she wrote that they're been badly injured and we haven't heard from them since and we only went out of the shelter room around maybe 4.30 in the afternoon even 5 so it's been hours sitting in the shelter room knowing there is nothing I can do and they're both and the kids are being dead or dying together in a shelter room 50 meters from me and I can't do anything and also I need to keep my calm I need to to show my kids that we're strong and we're gonna fight and we're gonna survive and that we're strong and we're gonna do whatever we can and then only at around 5 p.m. in the afternoon do you all gather from the kibbutz and begin to realize what happened who's here and who's not yes we the soldier came 1 in 4 we keep on saying this number it's incomprehensible it's insane the soldiers came around 4.30 and took us out of the safe room and we started walking to a big shelter the kibbutz has and that was a whole other scene like people starting to come over there and we're counting who's here who's not here groups of people is coming all over the kibbutz every half an hour maybe every hour and it's not really a small community but rather a big family right so you know every phase that is walking in and you especially know every phase that is not there yes and we keep wondering like why isn't he why aren't they're here like please soldiers can you go to this and that house and check if they're okay and then they come back and they say this house is empty so we say okay but we saw their text messages at 9 or 11 whatever and then we start to understand that people either being shot in their homes or being murdered in a very horrific other ways or they're being kidnapped you know Jonathan short days ago in this flood of there was one piece of news that chalked me to the very core straight line from here from Niroz into the Gaza Strip in one of the villages there Israeli soldiers found items belongings of people from Niroz and as Mo was just telling us she could hear the looting right outside while she was fighting for her and the family's life people stole their stole her things and there in the Gaza Strip they found children's bicycle and they found clothes and bags they found even the piece of cloth that you cover the challah of Shabbat dinner it was all found there and I think it shows a lot it speaks a lot about the failure of protecting these communities Niroz especially and others because I'm not sure that the terrorists that came in first they were worried about this they were worried about killing because that's what they do these merciless terrorists but then in some of the communities they came in people from Gaza they heard I guess they got messages saying that the the fence is open and they went in we could actually see videos of people a person with crutches coming in from Gaza celebrating and coming in to loot and to steal bicycles a piece of cloth clothing belonging to children this is what they were worried about coming and stealing and yes now these things are are found there in in Gaza when we speak of Hanunez that's what two miles from here something like that two kilometers two kilometers maybe even less so very very close the people just came in took the bicycles and maybe even rode the bicycles back home because the fence was open we're speaking here a lot about emotions and it's completely understood but there's a very big failure as to how this happened and it's a question that we're always told it's not the time it's not the time yet maybe it's right maybe it's first time to make sure that this threat is gone but this is a question that has to be asked first because these people I think they deserve an answer where was the army we were I'm a defense correspondent we were promised for years in years that such a thing can not happen period because there's a fence and which is the most incredible fence in the world and say that the fence is breached then there's the IDF but none of them was here the fence was easily breached and the army was not found we're hearing people here who said in their safe room for 8 or 9 or 10 hours there are stories of people that said for 24 hours waiting for the army which did not come where was the army it's a huge question that has to be asked maybe not now but at some point yes I think these people here and all these people in these communities they deserve an answer and the state of Israel deserves an answer to make sure that really such a thing never happens again not in this border not in any of the other borders because there's an unwritten pact in the state of Israel in which the citizens give and give and give but they know that in case of an emergency the state of Israel and the Israeli defense forces will be there for them I think that for the people here in your laws and many other communities the army and the state of Israel were not there on October 7 and Amit the social contract Jonathan was talking about was not only shattered on October 7 but now 100 days later as we speak there's still Nero's community members of your big family that are right there yes they're definitely part of what doesn't let us go on with our life is knowing that there's so many families that are not whole and not because their beloved ones are dead but because their beloved ones are there and no one is doing anything to bring them back I mean I'm sure the government is trying to do what they can but I think that the world should do more we want them here we need to to know that our friends are going to have their husbands here back and the kids that are my kids friends are going to have their dads here back and elderly people who needs medicine, who needs help who deserve to end their life and this is what makes it so hard to know that they build these they came to this country with such a like a mission and now they're going to end their life over there in Gaza where they're not treating them nice and you know disrespect them in any way unfortunately we're nearing the end of our conversation here and we even speak about what you've been through during those 100 days still sticking together as a community and yet can you ever imagine going back here can you ever imagine not going back here I can imagine never go back here I cannot see myself live here I wouldn't be able to sleep at night I don't think I don't know many people from Nero's that will come back here I'm sure there are but I don't know them it's not because we're scared also no we like it's because this place that we've been living in for 40 years and we love so much has been violated in so many ways like all my memories with my mom and my brother and my nephews my friends it's here in these streets in the kibbutz and I can't imagine myself walking between these houses and not having these people around me the literary meaning of Nero's in English is a mighty plowed field and there is no better description to this earth here to the people who grew here and hopefully for the life that will be rebuilt here a mighty plowed field I really do hope that we will sit here together again in the near future and speak of what is to come thank you thank you very much for joining us thank you we are taking a 3 minute break and we will be right back from here in kibbutz Nero's a state of war families completely gone down in their beds we have no idea where she is our soldiers are fighting on the front line but the general perception is something that certainly needs to be fought as well of kibbutz nero's once home to more than 400 men women and children now the scene of a massacre 50% of the houses in nero's we need to be completely destroyed cannot be rebuilt cannot be renovated all that's left is destruction remnants of a once vibrant community nero's literally means meadow of strength I love this place I love the fields I love the people this kibbutz was very beautiful will I come back and take the risk again? that's another question I don't know on october 7th dozens of heavily armed mass terrorists infiltrated their community we started to hear automatic weapons from all corners of the kibbutz endless endless endless shooting and grenades and we heard them going from door to door door to door it was obvious that they would come to our house at some point or his house it was very clear it was just a meadow of time and so when I made the improvised lock my hands were shaking maybe I would not finish tying this before they will break in so your whole body is shaking fear of death is really there one out of four people living here were killed or kidnapped in the midst of the rubble or signs of life standing still since october 7th we can see the matter that kfir probably drank for me before in the same day because it's still with a little bit water the baby bottle of kfir bibas only nine months old at the time he spent a quarter of his life in hamas captivity along with his four year old brother arielle and parents of the roughly 240 hostages taken to gaza nearly 80 were kidnapped from kibbutz near oz a third of the hostages ripped away from one single community every day there was crying frustration, anxiety how long are we going to stay here for have they forgotten us have they given up on us it's desperation that we'd never thought we would experience a scenario that we'd never thought we would go through it's beyond imagination sharing aloni cuneo and her three year old twin daughters yuli and emma were released after 52 days in captivity her husband david remains captive along with 37 other residents from kibbutz near oz nine of them believed to be dead hamas still holding their bodies hostage for 100 days residents of kibbutz near oz have been without a home without a community only with the constant reminder of how everything stopped on october 7th thank you for staying with us here at this special broadcast 100 days since october 7th and we are here in kibbutz near oz and they're joining us now still with us at 24 news senior defense correspondent jonathan regief, IDF, international spokesperson colonel liverefovich and we're delighted to welcome here sergeant maya from the skyrider unit who served there right here in the nachal oz base when the morning of october 7th changed the life as we knew it forever sergeant maya let's let's go back to the morning of october 7th on october 7th we were in nachal oz base and we woke up for the noises of the rockets and the missiles and we took our weapon and ran to the safe area we saw there about 30 girls and we were the only one with the weapon we said they're still hearing the rockets and the missiles and the shooting we didn't know what's going on and then the they said the base has been in vengeance and we didn't know what's going on then and we just set four of my team, four girls for my team and one signed and my commander officer on the other side with our guns pointing to the exit just waiting for someone to come we heard the shooting we heard yelling at first I thought that yelling is our soldier killing the terrorists and taking on the situation but then a terrorist got into our safe area we recognized him because of his bandana and beer and his outfit he shot at us we all, all four of us shot at him and then immediately they threw three hand remains the first one landing and killing my commander officer and the other two are landing one in the middle and one next to us like a few meters we continued to shoot and then we ran out to one of the rooms we locked the room and only there I recognized that I got injured I noticed my heads bleeding my hand, my chest, my legs we noticed that we got the grenade and it was loaded, yeah yeah and we locked the room and we sat there around seven hours thinking that what is happening they got a base they took over at the base killing everybody we heard them shooting they yelled for 40 minutes celebrating their success they were really happy they tried to get into our room they tried to open the door but it was locked they continued to shoot and threw another grenade one of the grenades sluggered the window and we sat there with only our weapon in one of the magazines and we tried to do our best and pointed the weapon into the window into the door but we have only three bullets left and we were in our pyjamas fighting for your life fighting for the country we have three bullets in your pyjamas we have left we just waited for someone to rescue us because we noticed that something is wrong something is insane Colonel Raffovic insane doesn't even begin to describe what we've just heard from Sergeant Maya and from so many others one of those sentences that will probably never never leave me and many others of this 6 year old brave girl not far away from here in Sderot after her parents who were killed and she was hiding her baby sister and after hours of hiding in a car she hears noises and Israeli soldiers are coming to the restaurant and she's asking them are you of Israel and you know broken Hebrew of Israel and this is exactly the type of of a situation Sergeant Maya is describing waiting for someone of Israel to come first of all like everybody here and everybody in the world watching this program would like to salute and to give all our respect to you Maya and to your bravery and to your courage and to the fact that you saved your life but you saved other lives on this day and this day remain for us a terrible tragedy we are now in the oars and we see the burned houses we heard the testimonies of people who lost their their children, their families what happened this day is something that never should have happened before and it happened and for now we are not going to explain what happened because we know what happened now we are fighting in these days you are fighting Maya in spite of the fact that you did what you did and again I just humbly want to salute you and you are a woman, you are a combatant your soldier that you are a hero so thank you first of all and we should thank you all of us in Israel all over the world, Jewish people even other people because what you did on this day is to fight against obscurity against darkness against Hamas and it shows one thing we must fight and the fight should go until Hamas will be destroyed and what happened on this day in Ni'o's, in Akhalo's in Kfar Azar, in Zderot in the base it is a willingness of one group one ideology to kill as much as possible Jews, Israelis because they are Jews because they are Israelis and we must do only one thing today to continue to fight even if the fight is not over yet even if we are still continuing to do everything to rescue our hostages was 136 but Maya you are the symbol of this fight and fight is not over, unfortunately no, not over yet and Jonathan Regev before we continue our discussion here we do want to take a look at the following report by you illustrating the security perception that was shattered here in Kibbutz Ni'o's and along the Gaza border let's take a look for more than a decade Israel did everything it could in order not to carry out a ground operation in Gaza despite thousands of rockets fired from the strip during that period but the terrible events of October 7 left it no choice I want to pass this along to each and every soldier we will continue to the end until victory, until Hamas is annihilated let there not be any doubt about it this is the message I want to convey to all soldiers out there there was no official statement marking the beginning of the ground operation it began some three weeks after the October 7th attacks the first stage included a massive advance into the northern Gaza Strip including Gaza City and the terror enclaves around it such as the neighborhoods of Jebalia, Sajai and Bed-Khanun all three of them in the eastern parts of Gaza, very close to the Israeli border the attack on the Israeli communities of Sderot, Kfar Azay and Akhaloz originated here, weeks of fighting are now meant to ensure it never happens again at the end of a stubborn and determined battle we dismantled the military framework of Hamas and Jebalia Hamas no longer operates in an organized manner in this area we have deprived them from their military capabilities in this area following a week-long ceasefire in late November to facilitate the hostage deal, the second stage began, this time focusing on Gaza's second largest city but it's biggest terror headquarter Khanunis in the southern part of the Strip is a central terror base for Hamas we have expanded our activity there, adding another brigade and we are continuing to act there with the use of new military tactics above the ground and below Khanunis has been practically taken over as is the case of the refugee camps just to the north it means that above the ground the Gaza Strip has been basically conquered but under the ground it's a different story there are still plenty of tunnels all across the Strip and Hamas terrorists operate from there that is why the army acknowledges there is still a long way to go before a decisive victory can be announced there are still terrorists in Jebalia however they operate without a framework and without commanders we have encountered and will continue to encounter sporadic rocket fire from this area we are deepening our achievements in these areas but it takes time there are no shortcuts in fighting terror shortcuts in fighting terror this is exactly what Israel was doing for years as thousands of rockets were fired on it fixing that damage will be a long and grueling project my 24 news senior defense goes by Jonathan Regev those communities those kibbutzes or the base of the Israeli security perception there is a saying that if you turn a light on the Israeli map every place there is a kibbutz that's exactly the borders it's true here, it's true in the north on the Jordan border and this is the front line this is the front line it's Niroz it's all these places the right on the border they were built in the 50's when coming here from the central Israel did not take an hour and a quarter by car it's a journey that took hours I remember it as a kid it's things that took hours and yet the people came here and set in difficult conditions to set the borders of this country that is what they did 75 years later we see that it's still the fact that it's a terrible thing that I'm going to say but still it has to be said the fact that these people here they stop these evil terrorists from getting further in if it wasn't Niroz it would be communities further inside this is why those communities that were previously dubbed the Gaza envelope are now dubbed the Israel envelope because they literally protect the state of Israel period and Jonathan 100 days in still no end in sight let's have a clear sense of what are we talking about 100 days of fighting some numbers published by the army and just before the story Olivier here said the numbers give us a sense of how much work there is there still needs to be done the number of terrorists Hamas terrorists and Hamas and other organization terrorists killed in the Gaza Strip is said to be around 9,000 it's a very big number but the fighting force that Hamas and the Izan Jihad and the other terrorist groups have is said to be around 35,000 something like that meaning a long way to go Hamas terrorists have been killed a lot still have to be killed among them the senior commanders two Hamas brigade commanders have been killed so far 19 battalion commanders 50 company commanders that shows that there is still a long way to go and the Hamas commander that was in charge of the Niroz massacre was targeted short while ago but still many of them are yes it's true that perhaps the warfare when it comes to Hamas will change because there is no central chain of command at least in the northern Gaza Strip no central chain of command so they are fighting as individuals not in an orderly fashion mostly from under the ground but they are still there it was only a few hours ago and rockets were fired to Ashdod roughly half way between the Gaza Strip and Tel Aviv so that is still happening and another issue we mentioned the rockets some 9,000 rockets have been fired from Gaza so far in those 100 days and if we are speaking of roughly 15,000 rockets said to be held by Hamas that means that there is still quite a lot of force one other thing let's remember this war is happening there is another war happening in the north and still as all this is happening some 2,000 rockets fired already from Lebanon crossing into Israel about 170 Hezbollah terrorists killed and some 750 Hezbollah positions targeted it was only today when people were killed in Kvaryuval and the war in the north has yet to start a community in the north that sets the boundary of the state of Israel just like here over there and yes these are the communities that take the heat to protect the state of Israel and yet again we are talking about fences and buffer zones it means that in the long term if these are the security or the defense plans it means that on the other side of the border there is still a threat but we will talk about it in the coming days but now we want to go back to Sergeant Maya here with us because you after what you have just shared with us on October 7th you went back to the battlefield into the Gaza Strip to fight when did you decide how did you decide after I was a few weeks at home going between my home and my the hospital that took care of me recovering physically and mentally I noticed that I want to go back I want to be there I want to be with my team with my people I want to be there it's important to me especially after what happened I realized I'm missing that I'm missing to be there in the front line so I got back to another team with one of my friends from the other team and we asked to be together to stay together to fight together on October 7th now you just did it in the Gaza Strip you were there for three weeks something like that and you're going to go back at some point to keep on fighting sure Sergeant Maya do you feel like a hero? no so what does it feel like I was on Nakhalo's base and I'm from a team that belongs to the north but we were there we did what we could do I'm glad for the girls that we did save and they did manage to go to the room and save themselves but I wish we could do more and now it's our time to do more Colonel Afavit if there's any hope amidst all this darkness if the horror is so profoundly intertwined with heroism it's this generation it's all the Sergeant Maya she is the symbol of what we are looking for but it is also the expression of our strengths against our enemy and when they sees when they see what we are doing what she is doing what they did and what they will do because again I repeat war is not over and changes are still waiting for us and again this war will be a long war and we need resilience we need strengths we need inspiration and our soldiers here and there in the Gaza Strip also have a very high moral very strong spirit and in a war it's not enough to have rifles or to have weapons the most important thing is to have people like you and Ben-Gurion said a long time ago they have planes who have planes but the difference is not a plane is who is in the cockpit of the plane and Maya is the cockpit of the relief and I'm happy to see that so many soldiers men and women I repeat men and women are actually the backbone the defense the iron dome the real iron dome of the idea from Israel and again I am obliged to salute you again Maya and when I see your eyes I see the eyes of thousands of people and of the future correct yeah it's not the rags of a mast that keep the ship going but the spirit or the wind in Hebrew it's the same word that make the shift move forward Jonathan Regev 100 days later the end of the war is still not in sight and the future of this area is still not in sight how do you rebuild the land, the trust the faith the trust will be difficult to rebuild because these communities were relying on the army to be there for them and we just heard from these two brave girls sitting here before recalling their story they felt that it was not here they had to wait for hours and hours for the army to come and it was true in other places while this was happening we're also hearing stories of heroism soldiers that worry here but the problem is that too many forces were not here only civilians were massacred here exactly so rebuilding the trust between I'm going to say the citizens here and the army and even more than that the citizens here and the state is something that will take I'm going to say generations it's it's very difficult the communities here were relying on something that didn't happen and they were promised that in case of an attack someone will always be there for them and they felt that someone was not there therefore rebuilding that trust and rebuilding that faith will take a lot of time some of the people will return some of the people will not return I think it will take years for this land to be the same again if ever because this is a a very big trauma that again these places they were never an easy it was never an easy place to live in but such a thing never happened and rebuilding and coming back after this will be a very difficult task just one short thing about an operation going on in the Gaza Strip the name is Oz Nio and this name of the operation is because Nio's happened and it happened it's terrible but now the idea if he's doing what he's doing because we have to fight again the people who just killed burned, raped people here in Nio's and as said at the beginning of our broadcast and this war will not end just when the hostages are back and when Hamas is eliminated this war will only end when Niroz will go back to being Niroz a mighty, cloud field Sergeant Maya Colonel Oliveira Fovic at 24 News Senior Defense Correspondent thank you very much for joining us and thank you dear viewers for joining us on this special broadcast 100 days since October 7th Niroz may hope and strength prevail thank you very much for joining us thank you Israel is in a state of war families completely gunned down in their beds we have no idea where is she as our soldiers are fighting on the front line but the general perception is something that certainly needs to be fought as well Nioz 24 News