The Japan Times - Israel's Hamas attack survivors find solace underwater

EUR -
AED 3.805967
AFN 78.238268
ALL 99.501027
AMD 411.740564
ANG 1.866857
AOA 945.028726
ARS 1088.994123
AUD 1.6614
AWG 1.867778
AZN 1.76568
BAM 1.952512
BBD 2.091448
BDT 126.313056
BGN 1.95472
BHD 0.39064
BIF 3066.137446
BMD 1.036215
BND 1.405686
BOB 7.157844
BRL 6.053612
BSD 1.035841
BTN 89.677843
BWP 14.427499
BYN 3.389778
BYR 20309.819708
BZD 2.080667
CAD 1.506709
CDF 2956.322601
CHF 0.943799
CLF 0.036927
CLP 1018.93163
CNY 7.447076
CNH 7.585656
COP 4357.2853
CRC 522.512665
CUC 1.036215
CUP 27.459705
CVE 110.077004
CZK 25.201071
DJF 184.156589
DKK 7.462864
DOP 63.992254
DZD 140.189974
EGP 52.046257
ERN 15.543229
ETB 132.686171
FJD 2.407077
FKP 0.853413
GBP 0.836177
GEL 2.96398
GGP 0.853413
GHS 15.848087
GIP 0.853413
GMD 75.129599
GNF 8953.622076
GTQ 8.012509
GYD 216.711978
HKD 8.075117
HNL 26.38757
HRK 7.6468
HTG 135.491868
HUF 407.802929
IDR 16947.560142
ILS 3.711614
IMP 0.853413
INR 89.83712
IQD 1356.915318
IRR 43624.664125
ISK 146.687036
JEP 0.853413
JMD 163.359429
JOD 0.734888
JPY 160.828389
KES 133.882955
KGS 90.617425
KHR 4167.922003
KMF 489.974798
KPW 932.593877
KRW 1510.574324
KWD 0.319652
KYD 0.863234
KZT 536.738148
LAK 22535.729651
LBP 92758.476841
LKR 308.690248
LRD 206.129949
LSL 19.334745
LTL 3.059675
LVL 0.626797
LYD 5.085266
MAD 10.397593
MDL 19.339158
MGA 4816.820039
MKD 61.522939
MMK 3365.586846
MNT 3521.059671
MOP 8.31478
MRU 41.496132
MUR 48.339835
MVR 15.96847
MWK 1796.149765
MXN 21.427637
MYR 4.616379
MZN 66.22491
NAD 19.334745
NGN 1557.431939
NIO 38.115823
NOK 11.736734
NPR 143.483566
NZD 1.838842
OMR 0.399053
PAB 1.035841
PEN 3.853412
PGK 4.217756
PHP 60.536773
PKR 288.922632
PLN 4.213993
PYG 8170.2435
QAR 3.775842
RON 4.975288
RSD 117.12449
RUB 102.138579
RWF 1470.30312
SAR 3.886514
SBD 8.759842
SCR 15.558581
SDG 622.765742
SEK 11.502156
SGD 1.406459
SHP 0.853413
SLE 23.703464
SLL 21728.916467
SOS 591.99467
SRD 36.370643
STD 21447.564418
SVC 9.063433
SYP 13472.871201
SZL 19.322466
THB 35.014097
TJS 11.326765
TMT 3.637116
TND 3.308429
TOP 2.426924
TRY 37.136661
TTD 7.026068
TWD 34.138152
TZS 2642.34934
UAH 43.198623
UGX 3813.578955
USD 1.036215
UYU 44.824528
UZS 13440.37002
VES 60.484509
VND 25988.279504
VUV 123.02156
WST 2.90226
XAF 654.844937
XAG 0.0331
XAU 0.00037
XCD 2.800424
XDR 0.79184
XOF 654.83232
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.888119
ZAR 19.350081
ZMK 9327.184796
ZMW 28.97779
ZWL 333.660901
  • RBGPF

    67.2700

    67.27

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.47

    -0.89%

  • CMSD

    -0.3800

    23.84

    -1.59%

  • NGG

    -0.3400

    61.4

    -0.55%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    35.27

    -0.26%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    39.64

    -0.1%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.48

    -1.39%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    49.89

    -0.92%

  • AZN

    -0.4800

    70.76

    -0.68%

  • RIO

    -0.5000

    60.41

    -0.83%

  • BCC

    -2.5000

    126.16

    -1.98%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.43

    -0.81%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.54

    -0.82%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    23.79

    -0.46%

  • BP

    -0.5500

    31.06

    -1.77%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

Israel's Hamas attack survivors find solace underwater
Israel's Hamas attack survivors find solace underwater / Photo: Ilan Ben Zion - AFP

Israel's Hamas attack survivors find solace underwater

Deep under the Red Sea, a passing Israeli warship could barely be heard as Yamit Avital held her breath and dived, her mind briefly cleared of the trauma of the October 7 Hamas attacks.

Text size:

"There's a kind of tranquility to the sea, in the deep," Avital said after she emerged from 20 metres (66 feet) under the aquamarine waters of the Gulf of Aqaba, also known in Israel as the Gulf of Eilat.

"It's like you don't hear anything, you only hear the music of the sea."

She and her husband Benny are among the survivors from Nir Oz, one of the hardest hit kibbutzim in Hamas's devastating attacks that left at least 1,140 people dead in southern Israel, according to an AFP tally based on the latest Israeli figures.

Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas and launched a punishing offensive that has reduced vast areas of Gaza to a ruined wasteland and killed at least 21,978 people, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry.

In the aftermath of the October 7 attacks, the Avitals and their three children were evacuated to Eilat, where they found themselves across the street from the coastal resort's Coral Beach Nature Reserve and its dive clubs.

Israel's diving federation, diving clubs in Eilat and dozens of volunteers have mobilised to offer evacuated Israelis courses in scuba diving and free diving -- where divers plunge deep underwater on a single breath.

Yuval Goren, manager of the Aquasport dive club, said they were "desperate to give whatever we can" to help the evacuees.

Many participants said they found it a meditative exercise that assuaged their trauma.

- 'You gave back my smile' -

Studies have suggested that therapy through scuba and other diving methods can be beneficial for treating trauma.

The novel underwater setting, physical activity, breathing exercises and body control, and exposure to and overcoming fear, can all serve to mitigate emotional pain, experts say.

"We have learned that being in the water and underwater has huge beneficial emotional effects," said Yotam Dagan, a psychologist who helped mobilise the diving federation's training efforts.

The sense of weightlessness, the slowed breathing and heart rate "lowers stress in a very meaningful way, not only during the diving session itself, but also beyond that, into the next minutes, hours, sometimes more than that", he said.

Instructor Ofer Mor has been running a project for children and adults from Nir Oz and other evacuees at the Snuba Dive Centre in Eilat.

She said the course was "very calm, very slow" and focused on the individual needs of the participants.

"One of the feedbacks at the beginning was 'you gave me back my smile,'" she said.

For the past two months, Shai Wolf, a volunteer free diving instructor for Aquasport, has shown evacuees proper breathing and diving techniques and "to know peace and quiet under water".

"It was simply moving to see them always improving, feeling much better, and ready to go out to a new reality," said Wolf.

- 'That feeling at 23 metres' -

Around a quarter of Nir Oz's 400 residents were killed or taken hostage on October 7.

Some captives from Nir Oz were released in November in a deal with Hamas, but 129 people are still held captive.

Benny Avital's brother was killed defending a nearby village, while he and his three children narrowly escaped death barricaded in their safe room. Both he and his wife Yamit lost friends and neighbours who were killed or taken hostage.

"Something in that feeling at 23 metres deep, when the lungs are collapsing and the diaphragm hurts and the throat is totally choked, and the toes clench -- that's the feeling that accompanied me throughout... October 7 and 8," Yamit said.

"At the end of the day to feel it, and know what it is, and return to the surface and take a fresh breath of air -- that's something very therapeutic, very healing."

However the Avitals will soon be unable to continue diving daily as their kibbutz is leaving Eilat for longer term accommodation in landlocked Kiryat Gat.

"There's a long way to go, we know this," Benny said, but it was "really our good fortune we got this hotel by the sea".

H.Takahashi--JT