How youngest Hamas victims suffered at the hands of terrorists: ‘It will never be a full recovery’
One 13-year-old child is so traumatized that when she recalls being held hostage by Hamas terrorists, it’s as if she is speaking about someone else.
Another little girl, bloodied and orphaned when her parents were fatally shot in front of her on their Israeli kibbutz Oct. 7, turned 4 while kidnapped — and expressed sheer joy at seeing her relatives when freed Monday.
For these young victims of Hamas’ unconscionable kidnapping plot — which saw them snatched from their families and held for nearly two months — it will likely take years to come to terms with the trauma they’ve experienced, experts say.
Others will likely carry the weight of what they heard and saw for the rest of their lives, they say.
“It will never be a full recovery,” said Dr. Ginio Daphna Dollberg, a clinical and developmental psychologist at the Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yaffo.
“It would never be that, [that] whatever happened to them would not affect them or be forgotten,” she said.
Of the 69 hostages released to date in the cease-fire, which began Friday, 31 have been children.
One of the freed kids, Hila Rotem Shoshani, 13, already seemed to be trying to cope with her horrific ordeal by dissociating from it — speaking about the past 50 days spent in captivity in a way that distances her from the nightmarish torments she endured, said her uncle Yair Rotem.
“She speaks about facts that happened,” Rotem told “Today” correspondent Richard England on Monday.
England replied, “Like it happened to someone else?”
Rotem said, “Yeah, it’s like a story.
“She doesn’t get settled when she talks about it.”
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Another former captive is 9-year-old Ohad Munder, one of at least two child hostages who spent their birthdays in Hamas custody.
He happened to hear his family wishing him a happy birthday on an Israeli TV broadcast while being held.
Other hostages wished him happy birthday when they heard the broadcast.
Ohad was abducted by Hamas terrorists from kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7 along with his mother, Keren, 55, and his grandmother Ruti, 78. All three family members were released Friday.
In footage made public by Schneider Children’s Medical Center, where many of the child hostages were brought to start their recoveries, the bespectacled youngster sprints down a hallway into the waiting arms of his father, who sweeps him off the floor for a heartwarming hug.
“Every day, every hour, every minute spent in captivity leaves its lifetime mark on the souls and bodies of the children and deepens their injury into continued and irreparable damage,’’ wrote more than a thousand experts in child welfare fields in an open letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres late last month.
Lillie Macias, an associate professor of psychology at the University of New Haven, told The Post the children are coming out of a situation where they had little, if any, choice over what they did from day to day.





