Israel’s border with Gaza. The event was billed as a celebration of “friends, love and peace.”It ended in a massacre.Just after dawn on Saturday, Zhiharev spotted what he initially thought were fireworks streaming across the sky.“But then I told my friend, ‘I think we’re getting bombed.’ And then as soon as I said that, the music cut off,” he said.Zhiharev and others mostly shrugged it off.
Israelis are used to seeing rockets fired from Gaza, the vast majority of which are shot down by Israel’s Iron Dome air defence system.Zhiharev, who spent several years in Toronto as a teenager, said he wasn’t too concerned. Until he heard the gunfire.“You could hear (the bullets) ricocheting off the cars.
It was like a Call of Duty scene. There was shooting everywhere,” Zhiharev said.“I felt like prey running away from a predator.”Gunmen from Gaza appeared without warning and started firing indiscriminately into the crowd.The music festival was one of the first targets for Hamas militants as they launched their unprecedented and coordinated attack on Israel, sending panicked partygoers scrambling in all directions.Many didn’t make it out.
Some tried to escape in their cars but found themselves trapped between other vehicles, and were gunned down in their car seats. Volunteer rescue crews have recovered more than 260 bodies from the scene so far.Others were kidnapped and are now being held hostage by Hamas.Seated at the kitchen table in his family’s apartment in Rishon le Zion, Zhiharev swiped left through photographs of smiling young faces on his phone, the festival attendees who are now missing, including several of his friends.“Most likely dead or kidnapped,” he said, speaking barely above a whisper.The 28-year-old former American
. Read more on globalnews.ca