American hostage Alexander by sadistic palestine: tied hand & foot inside a cage, deprived of daylight & suffering from extreme hunger

Sayaras

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Poor guy.
Welcome home.
Hope he heals, physically and MENTALLY





Chained in a cage and tortured .

chrome_screenshot_May 12, 2025 6_07_55 PM CST.webp




Edan Alexander's moving reunion with his family.
Footage shows the moving moment released American-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander reunited with his family in Israel.

Israel National News
Published: May 12, 2025, 10:34 PM (GMT+3)

Edan Alexander reunited with his family on Monday at the Re'im Camp in southern Israel after 584 days in Hamas captivity.

After a moving hug to his parent's he was surprised by how much his younger brother had grown, and exclaimed: "This kid is a giant, who is he?!"

Kan News reported that Edan described being tied hand and foot inside a cage, deprived of daylight, and suffering from extreme hunger in a Hamas-controlled tunnel in the southern Gaza Strip.

During his release, Alexander was visibly weakened, struggling to walk due to the toll of prolonged confinement.

 
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American hostage Alexander by sadistic palestine: tied hand & foot inside a cage, deprived of daylight & suffering from extreme hunger​


Almost 600 days of living hell until Trump got him free, while Joe Biden never lifted a finger for the guy while sleeping on the beach and not a single Columbia student protester stumped in protest for his freedom.
 
Sayaras

The video of the man reuniting with his family and friends suggests he is quite healthy, but probably hasn't seen the sun in a year or more.

Compared to the pictures of the hostages released by the IDF, Alexander looks downright healthy, but in need of sunlight.
 
Almost 600 days of living hell until Trump got him free, while Joe Biden never lifted a finger for the guy while sleeping on the beach and not a single Columbia student protester stumped in protest for his freedom.
Well, to be fair, Biden kept on pressuring Israel to surrender to Hamas, which may have got this guy released if it had happened.
 
Well, to be fair, Biden kept on pressuring Israel to surrender to Hamas, which may have got this guy released if it had happened.

There is nothing fair about surrendering to brutal attackers. That was not going to happen.

To be fair, the war in Gaza might never have happened if not for Biden funding Hamas while blocking others from taking action against them.

In many ways, both the war in Ukraine and the war in Gaza were both facilitated by Joe Biden.
 
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Sayaras

The video of the man reuniting with his family and friends suggests he is quite healthy, but probably hasn't seen the sun in a year or more.

Compared to the pictures of the hostages released by the IDF, Alexander looks downright healthy, but in need of sunlight.
He used to look like Whoopi Goldberg before he was starved and beaten.
 
Despicable LONELY Hitler's LUIZA always talks about "we" plural. Lowlife greedy always talks about money.
luiza said:
You will ...

  • Islam Palestine forced teens for sex acts on one another
  • Ohad Ben-Ami (56) other hostages were held "30 meters underground, in six meters of concrete and sand without air to breathe."
    “We received food twice a day that amounted to 700 calories at best,” former hostage Ohad Ben-Ami said as he detailed his hunger and sickness in Hamas captivity. “Most of our time was spent trying to guess what we would get to eat, when it would happen, whether we would get a whole pita for each person or just half, whether there would also be a cup of rice, [and] whether we got leftovers from our captors,” They didn’t know when they would next receive food or if they would have to save some for the next day. They would also divide the food evenly among the six of them. He described the common sickness that spread among the hostages. “When someone is sick, everyone is sick.” Starved and tormented: Ohad Ben-Ami shares details of 491 days in Hamas captivity. (JPost, 3.31.25).

  • Youngman Omer Wenkert said he spent 179 days alone. "The hardest part was the confinement. "I couldn’t stand or jump. On my birthday, they beat me. I just prayed that next year they wouldn’t." Teenage former hostage: Terrorist touched me constantly, said he wants us to get married (Ynet, 5.6.25).

  • Tal Shoham: Some mornings I wake up and forget, for a split second, that I’m free.
    Then I remember the silence. The darkness. The wet concrete. And the two young men who were lying beside me, deep underground, who are still there.
    Their names are Evyatar David and Guy Dalal.
    We were held together along with Omer Wenkert for eight and a half months in a Hamas tunnel—just 40 ft. long, less than 3 ft. wide. We slept on soaked mattresses, shared a single pita a day, and took turns whispering stories from home to keep ourselves sane.
    We were strangers when we entered that darkness. But we became brothers.
    It’s been more than 100 days since President Trump returned to the White House and the ceasefire deal that brought me, Omer, and dozens of others back was achieved. I haven’t been back above ground for that long—but even now, every breath of fresh air, every step in the sun, every quiet moment with my family feels like something sacred. Time feels different now. I carry it more carefully. Because I know how quickly time can run out—and how brutal each passing day is for those still living in captivity.
    I spent 505 days as a hostage—held deep beneath the ground. We were watched constantly by a surveillance camera. A bomb was planted above us, rigged to detonate if Israeli forces came too close. We were told we would be blown up if anyone tried to save us. We were threatened, degraded, and at times tortured—not treated as people, but as objects to be controlled and broken.
    I am not a soldier. I was kidnapped on Oct. 7 from my in-laws’ home in Kibbutz Be’eri. My wife and children were with me. When terrorists couldn’t break open the door of our safe room, they came in through the window. They dragged me out, threw me into a trunk, and then paraded me through the streets of Gaza.
    Before we were separated, I looked into my nine-year-old son's terrified eyes and made a choice no parent should ever face. I told him the truth—that I didn’t know if we were going to die. I couldn’t lie to him in what might have been our final moments together.
    For 50 agonizing days after that, I did not know if my family had survived. It was a rare flicker of hope when I learned in November they were about to be released.
    Evyatar and Guy, both 22 years old, had been taken from the Nova music festival. Their friends were slaughtered around them. By the time we met in captivity, they were in terrible shape—starved, handcuffed, terrified. For weeks, they’d been fed almost nothing. Their hands were bound behind their backs, their ankles tied, their heads covered with plastic bags. But somehow, they still had spirit. During those last eight and a half months we spent together in the tunnel, they held on.
    The men who held us didn’t see us as human. They tortured us for fun. Sometimes they would light pieces of paper on fire to suck up the small amount of oxygen from the tunnel. We would choke and have to lie on the floor to avoid suffocating.
    We came up with daily rituals just to remember who we were. In a place built to break us, we held each other up. We became a unit. We became family.
    When I walked out of that tunnel in February, I made a vow: I would speak for those who can’t.
    President Trump, I was released in a deal your administration helped progress. Your decision to make the hostages a priority helped bring many people home. I am one of them. I’m here today because this issue was treated with the urgency it demands.
    But we are not done. Fifty-nine hostages remain in Hamas captivity. And every day that passes makes it harder for them to survive.
    Hamas didn’t release us out of goodwill. They responded to pressure—the kind that comes from international focus and relentless advocacy. I am asking you to do that again to bring every hostage home—both the living and the dead... We can’t let military momentum override moral clarity.
    Evyatar and Guy are not statistics. They are sons. Friends. Music lovers. Gentle, funny, full of life. They deserve to walk in the sun again. They deserve a future.
    I have seen the darkness. I have felt the weight of airless days, of hunger, of silence. But I also know what it means to breathe again.
    Why I Vowed to Speak for the Hamas Hostages Who Can't
    I Am a Former Hamas Hostage. Here’s My Message to Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu. (Time. 5.9.25).
    Tal Shoham reveals the horrors of captivity in a letter to Trump and Netanyahu: "They tortured us for pleasure." Mako N12. 5.10.25.
 
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Most innocent fakestinians support Oct 7 atrocities.
True, not all, but most, so lets just kill 70% of their population and call it even. 1.4 million palistinian deaths sounds fair to me. :dunno:
 
Democrats were too busy trying to spring a gang banger illegal alien to be bothered with a U.S. citizen who was being tortured.
 
Well, it looks like the only time that these genocidal Zionist shills care about starvation in Gaza is when it happens to another Zionist.
 
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