Survivor Recalls Watching Israel Festival Massacre From Atop A Tree
Like most others his age, Uriel Balas was just excited to celebrate his 26th birthday with friends, having saved up for his ticket to Israel's much-anticipated Supernova music festival.
But excitement would soon give way to horror.
The two-day festival in the fields around Kibbutz Reim, just beyond the Gaza border in southern Israel, drew more than 3,000 people on October 6 and 7.
Nearly one in 10 people would never come back.
Balas scrolled through his last photos from the party, showing his friends giving a thumbs up and the festival in full force.
It was 6:00 am (0400 GMT) and the young Israeli and his friends were enveloped in the ecstatic fog of the party.
"Sunrise is the moment everyone waits for. Everyone lets loose, and the party begins," he told AFP in an interview in his apartment in Tel Aviv.
"Suddenly, we went from the party to complete vulnerability under missile fire," he said, describing dozens of rockets launched by Hamas flying over the dance floor.
It marked the start of the Hamas attack that would see 1,400 people killed, mostly civilians, in the worst attack on Israel in its 75-year history, according to Israeli authorities.
Israel has responded with an assault on Gaza that has killed over 11,000 people in just over a month, among them more than 4,000 children, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.
That day, as festival security asked everyone to evacuate, Balas's group staggered back to their car.
They had hoped to find an after party in Tel Aviv -- before the first shots fired by Hamas militants' automatic rifles sobered them up to a brutal reality.
"In the car, my friend and I held each other's hands and repeated 'everything is fine'" between swigs of gin, he said.
But the shots were getting closer.
They tried erratically to escape the fire in their car, before "we realised we were surrounded".
They needed to change course and abandoned the car.
"We started to run through a field and I could hear bursts of gunfire behind me and zipping past my ears," he said, mimicking the whistling sound of bullets.
"You see people falling right in front of you," he said, noting that there were "hundreds of us" in the field.
"I told myself that this is it -- today I leave this world, today I die," he said.
Reaching an orange orchard, Balas climbed a bushy tree to hide, with one thought on his mind: how to become invisible in the foliage.
"I pushed my white socks inside my boots, and took off my rings."
He tried to make himself "as small as possible", staying in his hiding place for two hours, helpless to stop the "incessant shooting" under him.
Curled up between two branches, he focused on his breathing to calm his trembles which were shaking the leaves and betraying his position.
"A terrorist will come, scream, and shoot me like a toy," he thought, praying for a shot to the head so he "wouldn't suffer".
When the shooting started to fade into the distance, he began running among the bodies, away from the festival, finding other survivors hiding in the bushes.
They hid behind a car, in the trunk of which two bodies lay lifeless, as a man convulsed beside them, bleeding to death.
The police took their call but, overwhelmed and helpless, wished them "good luck" before hanging up.
It was 9:00 am (0700 GMT) by then, and help "took several hours" more to arrive.
When they were eventually evacuated, he was crammed in a vehicle with 10 other people, while a policeman aimed his rifle out the window.
According to rescue services and the Israeli army, other than the hostages taken, more than 260 people were killed at the festival.
Since the beginning of the war, Balas has tried to keep himself focused on his job delivering food, but he has been smoking heavily, and can sleep only with antianxiety medication.
When he finally returned to his mother's house on October 7, a neighbour filmed his arrival.
His shirt torn, he stumbled "between laughter and crying".
Two hours later, he said he felt "an indescribable anger and anxiety".
Balas says he was exhibiting post-traumatic shock: the inability to live in the moment after having come so close to death.
"I lost part of my optimism there, as well as my sense of safety... Even when I'm home, how can I know that terrorists won't come here?"
"I also lost some of my faith in human beings, in humanity," he said.
But he promised to respond to his attackers in his own way: "To go back to partying as soon as possible."
© Copyright AFP 2024. All rights reserved.