British-Israeli hostage says scars show âhopeâ ahead of surgery

A British-Israeli hostage released by Hamas after 15 months in captivity has said her scars represented âfreedom, hope and strengthâ as she underwent a series of surgeries for her injuries.
Emily Damari, 28, was shot in the hand as she was dragged from her home in southern Israel during Hamasâs 7 October 2023 attack, causing her to lose two fingers.
She said an operation in Gaza had left her in âintense painâ for a year and a half, and that a scar from an âopen, festering woundâ did not heal for months due to the conditions in which she was held.
Ahead of her treatment, Ms Damari said she had âfully embracedâ the pain and injuries because of what they symbolise to her.
Ms Damari was held by Hamas in Gaza for 471 days prior to her release. She was one of the first hostages to be freed as part of a ceasefire deal struck between the Palestinian armed group and Israel after 15 months of fighting.
She was taken from her home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza, near the Gaza border, on the morning of Hamasâs unprecedented attack.
Ms Damari was also shot in the leg, and previously said she had only received an out-of-date bottle of iodine to treat her wounds while in captivity.
The 28-year-old said the complex operations on her hand and leg in Israelâs Sheba Medical Center had gone âmuch better than expectedâ.
She said the scar on her hand was âlooking betterâ and that the pain, caused by âthe nerves being sewn togetherâ in Gaza, had gone.
Now, with the help of physiotherapy, she hoped to have improved use of her hand.
But Ms Damari noted that her recovery would take time and her hand would ânever fully recoverâ.
She said the conditions in which hostages were being held were âunimaginableâ.
âIt was shocking but not surprising to see how emaciated some of the other hostages were when they came out,â she reflected.
âHamas has created hell on Earth,â she said, adding that there were others whose mental and physical health was âin much worse shapeâ than hers. She called for the release of all remaining hostages without delay.

Ms Damariâs mother, who grew up in Beckenham in south-east London, added that her daughter had been âsewn up like a pin-cushionâ in Gaza.
âIt is nothing short of a miracle that she did not contract a life-threatening infection,â said Mandy Damari.
Ms Damari said she was âso excitedâ to visit the UK with her mother once she had healed and the remaining hostages are released.
âI have so many people that I want to thank personally for helping me get my life back.â
The pair have been invited to Downing Street by UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, who previously spoke to Ms Damari over the phone.
During that conversation, she said she had been held at United Nations facilities during her captivity. The UNâs Gaza agency has called for an independent investigation into the allegation.
In total, 251 hostages were taken by Hamas when it attacked Israel on 7 October 2023, and a further 1,200 people were killed.
The attack triggered a war which has devastated Gaza. Israelâs military offensive killed at least 48,365 people, according to the territoryâs Hamas-run health ministry.
The first phase of a ceasefire came into force on 19 January, allowing the release of 33 Israeli and five Thai hostages in exchange for about 1,900 Palestinian prisoners.