Parents of injured Israeli American hostage say Hamas video offered ‘painful’ proof of life

Parents of injured Israeli American hostage say Hamas video offered ‘painful’ proof of life Featured

JERUSALEM — The last glimpse they had of their son was a shaky video showing him in the back of a pick-up truck with part of his left arm blown off by a Hamas grenade.

Now Rachel Goldberg-Polin, 54, and Jon Polin, 53, have the relief and distress of seeing him in a new video released by the militant group — proof of life they waited 201 days to see.

“Initially, we were just crying,” Goldberg-Polin told NBC News in an interview in Jerusalem on Thursday morning, less than 24 hours after Hamas released the footage of her son, Hersh. The video shows his arm is visibly severed below the elbow, and he calls on the Israeli government to make a deal to release the remaining hostages in Gaza.

“On one hand, this was a tremendous validation” she said, but “on the other hand, we see him — he is in captivity, he is obviously suffering.”

She added: “That is very painful. I mean, painful is too small of a word of what it’s like for any parent.”

It was not immediately clear when the video was recorded or the conditions under which he spoke in captivity. Although he references his nearly 200 days in captivity and a holiday, it’s not clear if he is still alive.

But Goldberg-Polin said when she first saw the video, she was not paying attention to what Hersh was saying. “I was just looking at him and hearing his voice,” she said.

Jon Polin and Rachel Goldberg-Polin in Jerusalem on April 25, 2024.Jon Polin and Rachel Goldberg-Polin speaking to NBC News in Jerusalem on Thursday.Dave Copeland NBC News

Hersh’s father said it was a relief to finally see his son, but said they immediately recognized that he has changed: looking pale, swollen and like he has been losing weight. That may be unsurprising after more than six months in captivity in Gaza, where Israel’s assault after the Oct. 7 attack has left more than 34,000 people dead, according to local health officials, and aid groups warn a famine may be imminent.

“He certainly doesn’t look like himself,” Polin said. “But it was amazing to see him, and amazing to see that he speaks like himself with clarity and strength. So a lot of mixed messages.”

Hersh Goldberg-Polin, 23, was taken hostage by Hamas at the Supernova music festival in the early morning hours of Oct. 7. The family knew he was taken into Gaza after trying to run away from the militants, but had been given no proof of life since then.

The family said it got a 45-minute notice from Israeli and U.S. intelligence sources that the video would be coming out on Wednesday. A source familiar with the situation told NBC News that Qatar, the Gulf state that has been helping to mediate talks over a hostage deal, received the video several days ago and passed it onto the U.S. government.

A U.S. official confirmed that the Biden administration received the video Monday and was in touch with Goldberg-Polin’s family. The administration has been working under the assumption that five U.S. hostages are still alive and unaccounted for, a U.S. official said earlier this month. 

The family does not know if Hersh spoke in his own words or whether his appearance was scripted, especially as he spoke in Hebrew, and not English in which they communicate at home. But his mother said they were happy to just “take the words,” especially as he referenced his parents and his two sisters, who she said were both “broken” when they heard their names.

The family has been relentless in its efforts to bring Hersh back, launching a social media campaign and making regular media appearances. Goldberg-Polin has met with the Pope and spoken at the United Nations, advocating for her son and other hostages. She has been wearing a small piece of masking tape emblazoned across her heart every day with the number of days that Hersh has been in captivity. 

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Now that they have seen their son alive, they feel new motivation to keep that fight going.

“Seeing that video just further lights the fire that we need to push all leaders, all of the world, every leader in this region, everybody who has been involved in negotiations,” Polin said. “We need to get all these people home.”

Negotiations to free the more than 130 captives who still remain in Gaza have stalled, prompting growing frustration and anger from their families.

Asked what her message to the negotiators at the table is, Goldberg-Polin said she is just a mother who is missing her son.

“He went to a concert with his friends, and he was stolen from his life and stolen from our lives,” Goldberg-Polin said. “And his wound is such that he will now be disabled the rest of his life. I want him home.”

She said she was no geopolitical wizard or someone with military powers, but that the families of the hostages have been in a “slow-motion” trauma for 202 days. As has everyone in the region to some degree, she said.

“It’s time to diffuse and release the pressure and the tension in this region, and to put a stop to all the suffering,” she added.

Asked how she remains hopeful, Goldberg-Polin said that the family feels there is simply no other option. “We say all the time that hope is mandatory. So it’s not really a choice. It’s mandatory.”

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