Current:Home > ScamsMother of Israeli hostage Mia Shem on Hamas video: "I see the pain" -AssetTrainer
Mother of Israeli hostage Mia Shem on Hamas video: "I see the pain"
View
Date:2025-04-13 17:54:31
The mother of a French-Israeli woman among the scores of people being held hostage by Hamas after the Palestinian group's terror attack on Israel, and who is seen in a harrowing new propaganda video released by the group, has told CBS News she hopes it indicates Hamas' willingness to negotiate over her daughter's release.
The disturbing video shared Monday by Hamas' on its Telegram messaging app channel shows 21-year-old French-Israeli national Mia Shem lying on a bed with her right arm appearing to be injured and treated by somebody out of the camera's view.
Shem appears somewhat distressed as she speaks directly to the camera, saying she's been taken to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip and pleading to be returned to her family.
"It's very hard to see my daughter, I see the pain, I see that she's in physical pain," Keren Shem, Mia's mother, told CBS News on Tuesday. "I see that she's very emotional and very, very scared."
Except in rare cases, CBS News does not broadcast videos of hostages if they appear to be propaganda produced by the captors. The network is not showing the Hamas video of Shem at this time.
The Israeli military has also released chilling new body camera video that it says came from a Hamas gunman, taken as he stalked victims in an Israeli kibbutz. It offers a frightening glimpse at the unprecedented, bloody terror attack carried out by Hamas inside southern Israel.
Haunting images, which appeared to have been edited together, show Hamas militants hunting Israeli civilians inside their own homes. The body camera of one gunman captured the moment he was killed.
For Israelis, including Army Capt. Shai, whose last name we're withholding for security reasons, the images of last week's bloody Hamas rampage have been forever etched in memory. For the dual U.S.-Israeli national , it was a clear calling to serve his country.
Shai lives in Queens with his wife and three children. On Oct. 7, he was at his synagogue in New York with his phone turned off.
"Somebody came up to me and said, 'Did you hear what happened in Israel?' And I said, 'No, what happened?' And he said: 'Terrorists.' I immediately understood that this is something else."
Along with more than 300,000 other Israel Defense Forces reservists, he was soon called up for duty. Shai is now in southern Israel, ready and waiting for an order to launch a ground invasion of the Gaza Strip. He says the mission isn't about wanting to fight, but needing to.
"I personally want to sit on the beach and have a gin and tonic," he admited. "But unfortunately, we don't have that privilege. We don't have that. You know, this is our only country... we have nowhere else to go."
In the aftermath of the Hamas attack, Israeli forces have laid siege to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, leaving much of the densely packed Palestinian territory in ruins and completely blockaded. Officials in Gaza say Israeli airstrikes have killed more than 80 people over the last day alone.
Shai said the brutality of the attacks on Israeli civilians was a national trauma not experienced since the Holocaust. But unlike that attack on the Jewish people in the 1940s, "now we have a country, and now we can defend ourselves, and that's what we have to do. I have no other choice, and I'm proud to do it."
- In:
- War
- Hostage Situation
- Hamas
- Israel
- Propaganda
- Gaza Strip
- Middle East
veryGood! (81)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Two teenagers charged with murder in shooting near Chicago high school
- First there were AI chatbots. Now AI assistants can order Ubers and book vacations
- LaChanze on expanding diversity behind Broadway's curtains
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Aldi debuts wine priced at $4.95 per bottle: See the full California Heritage Collection
- Apple says not to put wet iPhones in uncooked rice. Here's what to do instead.
- Fear for California woman Ksenia Karelina after arrest in Russia on suspicion of treason over Ukraine donation
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Reviewers drag 'Madame Web,' as social media reacts to Dakota Johnson's odd press run
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Court lifts moratorium on federal coal sales in a setback for Dems and environmentalists
- Toshiba Laptop AC adapters recalled after hundreds catch fire, causing minor burns
- Georgia lawmakers eye allowing criminal charges against school librarians over sexual content of books
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Hunter Biden’s lawyers suggest his case is tainted by claims of ex-FBI informant charged with lying
- Alexei Navalny's death reveals the power of grief as his widow continues fight against Putin
- Agency to announce the suspected cause of a 2022 bridge collapse over a Pittsburgh ravine
Recommendation
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Tom Holland Shares Euphoric Shoutout to Girlfriend Zendaya
Man faces potential deportation after sentencing in $300,000 Home Depot theft scheme, DOJ says
Senate conservatives press for full Mayorkas impeachment trial
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
February's full moon is coming Saturday. It might look smaller than usual.
Ye spotted wearing full face mask in Italy with Bianca Censori, Ty Dolla $ign: See the photos
Connecticut trooper who fatally shot man in stopped car set to go on trial