Dubai Telegraph - 'Helpless': How a massacre unfolded at Israel music festival

EUR -
AED 4.233671
AFN 73.194665
ALL 96.098026
AMD 434.73792
ANG 2.063249
AOA 1056.934107
ARS 1597.953836
AUD 1.672616
AWG 2.074679
AZN 1.963995
BAM 1.959096
BBD 2.321707
BDT 141.438607
BGN 1.970149
BHD 0.434932
BIF 3421.491428
BMD 1.152599
BND 1.484398
BOB 7.994452
BRL 6.057606
BSD 1.152735
BTN 109.259743
BWP 15.891948
BYN 3.431274
BYR 22590.948959
BZD 2.318271
CAD 1.602056
CDF 2630.812732
CHF 0.921047
CLF 0.027009
CLP 1066.454611
CNY 7.966595
CNH 7.976185
COP 4241.900181
CRC 535.298405
CUC 1.152599
CUP 30.543885
CVE 110.793667
CZK 24.569621
DJF 204.840425
DKK 7.483372
DOP 68.839048
DZD 153.613571
EGP 60.780607
ERN 17.288992
ETB 180.525933
FJD 2.605326
FKP 0.863369
GBP 0.86923
GEL 3.089417
GGP 0.863369
GHS 12.644465
GIP 0.863369
GMD 84.720497
GNF 10119.823464
GTQ 8.821883
GYD 241.302311
HKD 9.018803
HNL 30.555859
HRK 7.543422
HTG 151.104914
HUF 389.544478
IDR 19562.378679
ILS 3.61642
IMP 0.863369
INR 109.276051
IQD 1509.905262
IRR 1513651.210645
ISK 143.79875
JEP 0.863369
JMD 181.445311
JOD 0.817239
JPY 184.777872
KES 149.727048
KGS 100.795264
KHR 4624.229344
KMF 493.312963
KPW 1037.441269
KRW 1738.604484
KWD 0.354897
KYD 0.960629
KZT 557.270446
LAK 25241.928066
LBP 103215.279958
LKR 363.112571
LRD 211.646117
LSL 19.779046
LTL 3.403327
LVL 0.697196
LYD 7.347866
MAD 10.77047
MDL 20.247333
MGA 4812.103048
MKD 61.653692
MMK 2423.384684
MNT 4126.293486
MOP 9.300912
MRU 46.242726
MUR 53.907512
MVR 17.808097
MWK 2002.065619
MXN 20.885537
MYR 4.522845
MZN 73.709169
NAD 19.779041
NGN 1593.376948
NIO 42.323885
NOK 11.183511
NPR 174.81139
NZD 2.00487
OMR 0.443844
PAB 1.152725
PEN 3.987422
PGK 4.966595
PHP 69.621275
PKR 321.810029
PLN 4.290379
PYG 7536.681697
QAR 4.210734
RON 5.102908
RSD 117.355414
RUB 94.006932
RWF 1683.947777
SAR 4.324958
SBD 9.269248
SCR 16.631141
SDG 692.712653
SEK 10.919347
SGD 1.486627
SHP 0.864748
SLE 28.296744
SLL 24169.446365
SOS 658.714799
SRD 43.338935
STD 23856.481251
STN 24.607998
SVC 10.085971
SYP 127.392533
SZL 19.779032
THB 37.453762
TJS 11.01432
TMT 4.034098
TND 3.37255
TOP 2.775182
TRY 51.199509
TTD 7.832145
TWD 36.8561
TZS 2969.657508
UAH 50.526719
UGX 4294.225736
USD 1.152599
UYU 46.658511
UZS 14067.47651
VES 539.333958
VND 30356.587664
VUV 137.974433
WST 3.17522
XAF 657.062615
XAG 0.016471
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.114958
XCG 2.077505
XDR 0.814648
XOF 654.676862
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.014362
ZAR 19.732921
ZMK 10374.782181
ZMW 21.699513
ZWL 371.136548
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    0.1400

    74.43

    +0.19%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.77

    -0.22%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6100

    14.69

    -4.15%

  • NGG

    -0.4800

    81.92

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    25.25

    -0.87%

  • GSK

    -0.1000

    53.84

    -0.19%

  • RELX

    -0.1000

    31.97

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    0.3749

    57.8

    +0.65%

  • RIO

    0.8500

    86.64

    +0.98%

  • JRI

    -0.2700

    11.8

    -2.29%

  • BP

    0.5100

    46.68

    +1.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.66

    -0.4%

  • VOD

    -0.1400

    14.49

    -0.97%

  • AZN

    5.0200

    188.42

    +2.66%

'Helpless': How a massacre unfolded at Israel music festival
'Helpless': How a massacre unfolded at Israel music festival / Photo: Jack GUEZ - AFP

'Helpless': How a massacre unfolded at Israel music festival

Osher and Michael Waknin wanted to celebrate friendship, love and freedom. The twins in their 30s "organised parties all over Israel... They were always happy kids," their sister said.

Text size:

Their last party, however, became the scene of horrific tragedy when it was targeted by the Hamas gunmen who launched the worst attack on Israel in its 75-year history.

Yet before the incomprehension that became terror under the rattle of automatic weapons, the festival had opened as a huge success.

From Friday onwards, some 3,500 electronic music fans -- from Israel and abroad -- flocked under brightly coloured canopies of the Supernova event just five kilometers (three miles) from the Gaza border.

Three stages, DJs from all over the world, a camping area, bars to cater for partygoers. Everything was in place for a weekend of dancing in the Negev desert.

But as dawn broke on October 7, the music suddenly stopped. It was around 6:30 am. In the distance, noises that had nothing to do with the party could be heard.

"Guys, red alert, regroup," warned the loudspeaker.

Sparks in the sky, followed by the explosion of rockets which were intercepted by Iron Dome, Israel's air defence system.

They were the first signal of the horror to come.

Ephraim Mordechayev, 23, is a young soldier who had come to celebrate the weekend, which coincides with the Jewish Sabbath.

At first, "we didn't comprehend the scope of the event," he told AFP back in his apartment in the northern city of Or Akiva, still wearing the festival wristband.

"We start to panic but we were calm, we are used to this. We are just used to rockets" launched from the enclave, which has been under Israeli blockade since Hamas took control in 2007.

The young man and his friends began to leave, but soon realised that something far beyond their comprehension was happening around them.

Gunmen were in the crowd -- they came on foot, by motorcycle or from the air accompanied by the rattle of automatic gunfire.

"There is a someone that is 20, 10 metres from you with guns and trying to kill you," he said.

- Scrambling for their lives -

The attackers killed anyone they came across.

The security guards and police present at the scene were quickly overwhelmed, and themselves targeted.

Everyone scrambled for their lives with some running towards the fields surrounding the site, while others tried to reach their vehicles in one of the festival's car parks.

But before long, a traffic jam formed.

"I looked back and saw that in the car behind me there were three corpses, and all the cars' windows were shattered," said Mordechayev.

There were just two options: hide or run for his life across the surrounding fields. Mordechayev chose the latter.

He ran from bush to bush, terrified, until an already packed car picked him up.

But Route 232, the only path away from suffering and death, was not much safer.

The road runs parallel to the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip, linking the neighbouring kibbutz of Re'im to the town of Sderot, some 30 kilometers to the north.

7:39 am: A camera aboard a car that managed to escape reveals how the trap closed on people there.

Bursts of gunfire from Hamas attackers behind embankments lining the roadway shattered the windshield, forcing the driver to stop, although it was not clear whether he was hit.

Another festival-goer, Gili Yoskovich, also decided to abandon her vehicle and make a run for it across the barren fields where there was almost no cover.

The young woman spotted a small orchard and ran for its shelter with the attackers following close behind.

Others too were scrambling for a place to hide.

For hours, as the crackle of automatic weapons grew ever closer, some concealed themselves behind cars or scattered when the gunmen neared.

Some even lay among the corpses in the hope of surviving.

- Leading away hostages -

Three hours after the assault began, Hamas gunmen continued their carnage without encountering any resistance.

Surveillance images timestamped 9:23 am show a man in a black cap, with body armour over his shoulders, leading away a hostage in a bloody T-shirt.

In the background, a young man who was playing dead suddenly stirs. It appears he believes the coast is clear for him to run.

But he didn't see the assailant coming up from behind. The attacker killed him at point-blank range.

Several survivors told the media that they had waited six, sometimes seven hours before finally being rescued by the Israeli army.

When the first rescue workers arrived on the scene, they were horrified to discover the scale of the carnage: some 270 people had been killed and dozens of burnt-out vehicles crowded the road to the site.

For hundreds of meters, sleeping bags, mattresses, shoes and coolers littered the ground, hastily abandoned.

"In each car there were two or three bodies, or just one body shot dead," Moti Bukjin, an Israeli volunteer who recovers corpses, told AFP.

"They had so much time till the security forces got there. Some of the cars, they burnt with people inside," he added.

Days after the massacre, there are still the dead to mourn, but also the anguish that gnaws at families searching for the missing.

Dozens are believed to have been kidnapped and taken back as hostages to Gaza, an enclave now under intense bombardment by Israel's forces.

One mother, Ahuva Mayzel, last heard from her 21-year-old daughter Adi, who was at the festival, an hour after sunrise.

Waiting for news of her child, Mayzel said "we are just helpless, completely helpless as her parents."

The family of Michael Waknin, one of the twin organisers of the party, has been asking: Is he alive and among the captives?

His sister Ausa wants to believe he is alive, but hasn't heard from him since the attack.

As for their brother Osher, witnesses saw him get out of his car to rescue people in the midst of the chaos.

His widow, Sunny Waknin, said he died a hero. He was laid to rest on Tuesday in Jerusalem.

Y.Sharma--DT