‘I tried to accept death’: Freed hostage recounts abduction, captivity and release
Separated from his family, moved from apartments to tunnels, humiliated and starved, Tal Shoham tells harrowing story of his 505 days as a hostage in the hands of Hamas

Whether the threat was abusive Hamas guards, hunger, illness or Israeli strikes, there were moments during Tal Shoham‘s 505 days of captivity at the hands of terrorists in Gaza when he didn’t think he’d be alive the next morning.
There were “many times that I separated from life and… tried to accept death,” the 40-year-old Israeli, who also holds Austrian citizenship, told The Associated Press. “There are so many ways to die there.”
Shoham was one of dozens of hostages released from Gaza in February as part of a ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel that has since been broken.
His wife, two children and three other family members were also kidnapped on October 7, 2023, and were freed a month later.
His parents-in-law were among the approximately 1,200 people murdered by Hamas-led terrorists during the onslaught as 251 were taken hostage, triggering the ongoing war.
Shoham said he spent half his captivity in apartments and the rest in underground tunnels. He was sometimes bound, starved, beaten and threatened with death, and initially didn’t know if his family was alive.

After his wife was released, Shoham said, someone identifying himself as a member of Hamas called to warn her not to talk about what she’d been through or they’d kill her husband. As he recounted his own experience, Shoham said there were details he wouldn’t discuss, fearful of endangering remaining hostages.
With ceasefire talks at a standstill, terror groups in Gaza are still holding 59 hostages, 24 of whom are believed to be alive.

The abduction
Shoham was kidnapped while visiting relatives in Kibbutz Be’eri. When Hamas attacked, he and his family hid in a safe room. But as terrorists pried open a window and used explosives to try to break in, the family surrendered, a decision Shoham credits with saving their lives.
Shoham was thrown into the back of a vehicle and taken into Gaza, not knowing what happened to his wife or children. Be’eri was among the hardest-hit communities that day.
Before being separated, Shoham recalled telling his now 9-year-old son that he didn’t know if they were going to die. “I didn’t want him to hear a lie from me, if it’s the last minutes of our life,” he said.
Upon entering Gaza, a gunman jumped on the car’s roof, pointed his weapon at Shoham and told him to kneel. But Shoham refused, not wanting to be killed on their terms, he said.
He said the gunman had “murder in his eyes.”

The apartments
Shoham was first taken to an apartment that his captors said was in northern Gaza. He spent weeks there, handcuffed and confined to a room.
About a month later, he was moved to another apartment and joined by Evyatar David and Guy Gilboa-Dalal, hostages he would spend most of his captivity with.
The two men were abducted from a music festival in southern Israel, where at least 364 people were killed and dozens more taken hostage. Hearing from them about the conditions of their captivity made Shoham feel lucky about his own. They’d been kept in more uncomfortable zip-tie handcuffs, with plastic bags on their heads, he said, and fed one pita per day.
The three lived in the apartment for months, where they endured daily beatings. Guards would taunt and humiliate them, asking how the music festival was and making shooting noises, Shoham said.

Forbidden by their captors from speaking, they got to know each other through furtive whispers.
To humanize himself in the eyes of his captors and hopefully make them less likely to kill him, Shoham learned Arabic and spoke with them about his life in Israel.
One of their guards liked massages, Shoham said, so the captives provided daily back rubs in exchange for more variety in their diet, like tuna, sardines and even eggs.
Shoham learned his wife and children were alive about 50 days into his captivity. In what he considered an act of kindness, his captors gave him a letter written by his wife that said she and their children were okay and would be released soon.
He credits that gesture by the guards with giving him more mental strength to focus on his own survival.

The tunnel
Last June, Shoham, David and Gilboa-Dalal were relocated to a tunnel that they estimated to be about 30 meters (98 feet) underground.
Shoham said they were moved after Israeli forces rescued four hostages from apartments in Gaza earlier that month.
They were transported in an ambulance, Shoham said, cleanly shaved, dressed in Palestinian clothes and blindfolded. Israel has accused Hamas terrorists of hiding in ambulances and other emergency vehicles, as well as in hospitals and other civilian infrastructure.
The tunnels were dark and damp, and it was hard to breathe, Shoham said. The three men were kept with another hostage, Omer Wenkert, who had been in the tunnels for much longer.
They shared a 12-meter-long (39-foot-long) cell and slept on mattresses on the ground, a meter away from a hole that was their toilet. They showered roughly every 21 days.
Shoham lost about 60 pounds (28 kilograms) while in captivity. He developed a leg infection that was so bad he couldn’t walk for weeks. After a doctor visited and provided vitamins, he said his health improved.
What also helped Shoham survive, he said, was focusing on what he could control. He started doing mindfulness activities he had learned from his wife, a psychologist, and discussed his feelings with the other hostages. “The only thing that I have power upon is my inner life,” he said.
He told himself each day that he’d eventually be free.

Back home and healing
Shoham and Wenkert were freed together in the last release of living hostages before the ceasefire ended. The last thing Shoham told David and Gilboa-Dalal was to be strong and not lose hope.
Hamas later released a video showing the two men, sitting in a vehicle, distressed as they were forced to watch the handover of released hostages that day. A group representing hostages’ families called the video “sickening.”

Shoham worries they’re running out of time and is urging the government and the international community not to tie the hostages’ fate to a ceasefire.
“I really fear that if they won’t be released soon, they probably will die there,” he said.
Shoham said his own healing process has been made easier by knowing his family can relate to what he endured.
And his freedom has helped the family properly mourn those killed on October 7, including family. While he was in captivity, they’d been so focused on his release, he said.

Since returning home, Shoham has gained back 35 pounds (16 kilograms), saying he wanted to eat everything and never felt full. Lately, he’s been trying to get back to his pre-captivity routine of intermittent fasting.
While his leg is still not fully healed, Shoham says he’s one of the lucky ones, in that he’s not suffering from nightmares. He credits his children with helping him keep moving forward.
“When I can hear my children addressing us, like mother and father, mom and dad, saying both names, it’s like music to the ears,” he said. “As a family, we’re all in the process of recovery now. But we are doing it together.”
Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
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