Nir Oz attack
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Nir Oz attack | |
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Part of the |
On 7 October 2023, as part of the
Background
The Nir Oz (Hebrew: נִיר עֹז, ניר עוז), is a kibbutz in southern Israel between Magen and Nirim and was founded on 1 October 1955 as the Nahal settlement.[5] Due to its proximity to the Gaza Strip, the kibbutz has seen constant attacks from the Gaza Strip, and in a 2023 book it was reported that the kibbutz had a number of "self-contained bomb shelters, each weighing 67 tons".[6] Nir Oz is a kibbutz located in the Gaza envelope, less than 7 kilometers from the border with the Gaza Strip. On October 6, before the attack, Nir Oz had 427 residents.[7]
Attack

The attack on Israel started at around 6:29 a.m. Israel Summer Time (UTC+3) with a widespread rocket barrage, resulting in many kibbutz residents being in their safe rooms as the attack began.[8] Of the kibbutz's population of around 420 residents, 386 were present during the attack.[1] Some survivors of the Psyduck music festival massacre also sought refuge in the kibbutz.[9]
Under the cover of the rocket barrage, Hamas fighters breached the border in numerous areas and invaded Israel. Six of the breaches were in the Nir Oz area, through which fighters from Hamas'
With the start of heavy rocket fire and Hamas militants spotted approaching the border, two tanks and an armored personnel carrier from a nearby military outpost had positioned themselves along the border close to Nir Oz, with one tank south of the kibbutz, the other north of it, and the APC between them. The tank to the south was disabled after being hit by five anti-tank missiles. Three of its crew were killed and another crewman was captured: the bodies and living crewman were taken to Gaza. Footage of this incident circulating online resulted in the tank becoming an attraction for Palestinians during the attack, with hundreds from
Hamas fighters took out military surveillance cameras on the border close to Nir Oz with sniper rifles at 6:38 a.m. Only one camera, located next to the kibbutz further from the border, continued to function. At 6:42 a.m., Colonel Asaf Hamami, the commander of the Gaza Division's Southern Brigade, alerted the local community security teams in the area. He would later be killed defending kibbutz Nirim. The kibbutz security team was activated by the security coordinator at 6:43 a.m. At 6:49 a.m., a car carrying two partygoers fleeing the Psyduck festival massacre entered the kibbutz through its main gate, evading the first militants to enter the kibbutz, who arrived 10 seconds later.[1][11]
At 6:52 a.m., a member of the kibbutz security team exchanged fire with the militants while other members attempted to assist. At 6:55 a.m., another vehicle with fleeing partygoers from the Psyduck music festival was fired on by militants at the entrance to the kibbutz, killing two. At 6:57 a.m., Hamas militants carried out the first murder inside the kibbutz, killing 74 year old Bracha Levinson in her home while livestreaming the murder on her Facebook page. Between 7:11 a.m. and 7:18 a.m., another two vehicles with partygoers fleeing the Psyduck festival arrived at the entrance to Nir Oz, where waiting militants murdered the partygoers. At 7:27 a.m., militants entered Nir Oz through a southern entrance and proceeded to the foreign workers' residences, killing twelve foreign nationals and kidnapping five. The militants continued their rampage in the kibbutz, killing residents in their homes and setting buildings on fire. They began taking hostages at around 8:30 a.m.[1]
The kibbutz security team and other armed kibbutz members attempted to fight off the attack, yet were outnumbered by the amount of Hamas and other militants that had entered the kibbutz. The majority of the kibbutz's security team were killed or taken hostage while attempting to defend the kibbutz.[12][13] Some security team members and other armed civilians fought from their homes.[1] One member of the security team, Eran Smilansky, shot two militants who entered his home, then fired at a group of six militants gathered nearby and observed them falling.[14] Another armed resident, Yaron Maor, a veteran of the IDF's Givati Brigade, also shot two militants who entered his house and additional ones nearby.[15][16] The kibbutz security coordinator attempted and failed to link up with an IDF force, and then launched a solo assault. He was wounded but managed to extract himself to his home's safe room, and struggled to communicate in the following hours due to poor reception.[17] Four members of the security team formed an expanded group with three other armed residents and made a stand against the militants, managing to delay some abductions and killings for about two hours, but were overwhelmed and eventually defeated at around 9:00 a.m., with organized resistance coming to an end after that and abductions subsequently ramping up. Afterwards some armed kibbutz members continued to resist individually. Four kibbutz defenders were killed: two members of the security team and two other residents posthumously recognized as members of the security team. The IDF investigation concluded that the security team fought bravely but that even a larger team would not have stood a chance against the sheer number of militants in the kibbutz without backup from the military.[1][17][11]

The militants spent several hours in the kibbutz, killing civilians, abducting hostages, and setting fires to homes.[18] A sister received an WhatsApp message from her brother; Yonatan Siman Tov, in the kibbutz that "They're here, they're burning us, we're suffocating." Siman Tov and his mother, wife and three children were all killed in their safe room.[19]
An amateur Palestinian journalist also entered Nir Oz and recorded a live stream of the unfolding events.[18] Survivors of the attack reported that Palestinian civilians from Gaza entered Nir Oz to loot. In one instance, a family taking shelter in their safe room reported hearing looters inside their home rummaging through their belongings, watching Netflix, and preparing food.[20][21]
At 9:22 a.m., an Israeli Air Force helicopter arrived at the kibbutz and began carrying out strikes on a road leading from Nir Oz to the Gaza border after identifying militants there. The helicopter came under fire and had to make an emergency landing at Hatzerim Airbase. At 9:55 a.m., one of the tanks that had headed for the Gaza border in front of Nir Oz earlier in the morning arrived at the kibbutz. Two of its crew had by then been wounded, with one having been evacuated by an armored personnel carrier. At 9:57 a.m. it fired two shells at militants at the entrance to Nir Oz. The IDF was unable to determine if any were killed, as no bodies were found there, though Hamas fighters may have taken the bodies of those killed back to Gaza. At 10:00 a.m., another Israeli Air Force helicopter arrived over Nir Oz and began firing on militants along the route from the kibbutz to Gaza but soon after received orders to head to the Gaza division base near Re'im, which was under attack. At 10:06 a.m., the tank received an order to leave the area to help prevent a suspected capture of soldiers elsewhere.[1]
At 10:22 a.m., the helicopter returned from the Re'im base and resumed airstrikes against militants on the road between Nir Oz and Gaza. The tank also reached this area and attempted to run over militants. By 10:30 a.m., the militants began to withdraw to Gaza. At 11:30 a.m., the helicopter fired on a tractor being used to transport eight Israeli hostages on the road to Gaza, killing the militants on board as well as hostage Efrat Katz. More militants subsequently arrived with another tractor to collect the surviving hostages. One hostage, Naamit Dekel-Chen, avoided abduction by pretending to be dead. The remaining hostages were recaptured and taken to Gaza. At 12:20 p.m., the helicopter carried out another strike. The last known presence of a militant in the kibbutz was at 12:30 p.m.[1][22][23]
The attack was notable due to the fact that IDF reinforcements did not enter the kibbutz during the massacre. It was subsequently found that the IDF failed to properly assess and respond to the situation at Nir Oz, sending troops to nearby communities under attack. The tank that had operated in the vicinity of Nir Oz failed enter it. A force of Sayeret Matkal special forces soldiers was dispatched to Nir Oz but they encountered a group of 15 militants at a road junction and in the subsequent clash an officer was killed at about 11:00 a.m. After the firefight, the force was redirected towards Re'im. At around 11:30 a.m., two commando companies from the Egoz Unit were dispatched towards Nir Oz and Kissufim but they encountered militants along the way and battled them before being diverted to other tasks without the IDF Southern Command having been notified.[22][23] The attack was deemed to be a particularly egregious failure of the IDF on October 7. It became known as the "failure within failures" of October 7.[17]
At about 1:10 PM, some 40 minutes after the last militants are estimated to have left the kibbutz, a team from the Yamas tactical unit of the Israel Border Police arrived, constituting the first reinforcements to enter the kibbutz. They were followed by commandos from the Egoz Unit who arrived at 1:47 p.m. and Shayetet 13 naval commandos who arrived at 2:50 p.m. The troops evacuated residents and conducted searches, but there was no combat as by then the militants and looters had all left.[1][22] The surviving kibbutz members were evacuated to Eilat.[24]
Casualties and hostages
The death toll was reported as 46.[25][26] The IDF investigation, released in April 2025, found that 47 people were killed in the kibbutz, of whom 41 were residents of the kibbutz and 6 were partygoers fleeing a nearby rave.[1] The total number of dead from the kibbutz, comprising both those who were killed on October 7 and in captivity in the Gaza Strip, was put at 69.[1]
Hamas militants killed the Israeli-American Kedem-Siman Tov family in their secure room at the kibbutz, including three adults and three children under the age of seven.[27][28] The killing of Bracha Levinson, an elderly woman from Nir Oz, was reportedly filmed and posted on her Facebook wall by Hamas.[29][30]
It was initially assumed that Noya Dan, a 12-year-old girl with
The body of one Palestinian militant was found in the kibbutz. The IDF investigation concluded that several more militants were likely killed by armed kibbutz residents and their bodies were picked up by their comrades. An additional 64 militants killed by IDF helicopters and a tank were found near the kibbutz on a road leading to Gaza.[1]
Hostages

Many kibbutz residents were taken hostage during the attack. The Jerusalem Post also estimated 80 abductions in Nir Oz.[7] According to The Forward, 71 hostages were taken from the kibbutz.[26] The IDF investigation found that 76 hostages were taken from the kibbutz, of whom 67 were taken alive. The remaining 9 were killed in the kibbutz and their bodies were taken to Gaza, were killed en route to Gaza, or were killed in Gaza itself on the same day of their abduction. Another 13 were later killed in Gaza throughout the course of the war.[1]
According to The Forward, 40 of the hostages were released during the weeklong
Some of the hostages died in captivity. On December 1, 2023, it was announced by the Israel Defense Forces that four kibbutz Nir Oz residents had died in captivity.[41] Israeli-American-Canadian couple Judi and Gadi Haggai were believed to have been captured by Hamas and being held in Gaza. It was reported on December 28, 2023, that Judi had been fatally wounded during the attack and her husband had been announced as deceased about a week prior. As of December 29, 2023, their bodies are still being held in Gaza.[42]
An Israeli inquiry into the events analyzed video footage and witness testimonies. The findings indicated that an Israeli helicopter gunship targeted a vehicle containing hostages, manned by militants, resulting in the likely death of an Israeli hostage named Efrat Katz by
Aftermath
A large percentage of the kibbutz residents were killed, wounded, or abducted.[8] An account by veteran war correspondent Itai Anghel reported that "around a quarter of the people of Nir Oz were assassinated, kidnapped, or injured in a very severe way. Those who survived have no place to come back to."[44] The destruction was extensive: militants and looters entered all but six homes in the community.[17]
Survivors of the attack were
In February 2024 Argentine President Javier Milei and Israeli President Isaac Herzog, toured the kibbutz during Milei's bilateral visit to Israel. At the kibbutz Milei reflected on the Argentine-Israeli Bibas family still held hostage and the met with the parents of Argentine-Israeli hostages still held.[47]
Those who still reside in or visited the kibbutz have tied yellow ribbons on trees and marked the mailboxes inside the dining hall with colored stickers to show a residents status; red for deceased, black for hostages, and blue for released individuals. Posters from the Kidnapped from Israel campaign are posted on the homes of hostages.[45]
Weeks after the attack, filmmaker Dani Rosenberg filmed a docudrama,
See also
- Kidnapping of the Bibas family
- Outline of the Gaza war
- List of military engagements during the Gaza war
- Palestinian political violence
- Moshe Dayan's eulogy for Ro'i Rothberg
References
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- ^ from the original on 15 October 2023. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
okayed
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ October 7 probe: IDF only arrived in Nir Oz after Hamas terrorists left because it was 'far away'
- ^ a b IDF Investigation Into Nir Oz Reveals an Exceptional Failure – Even Compared to Oct. 7
- ^ Harris, Mary (16 December 2023). "When the Israeli Hostages Came Home, His Son Didn't". Archived from the original on 29 December 2023. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
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- ^ Klingbail, Sivan (10 October 2023). "My Kibbutz Was Erased: I Never Imagined I'd Write This". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 12 October 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
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