- by foxnews
- 03 May 2026
EXCLUSIVE: Former hostage Rom Braslavski said he endured physical and emotional abuse while held above ground by Palestinian terrorists in Gaza, at times surviving on just half a pita bread and a morsel of cheese. And he was injected with an unknown substance after collapsing from exhaustion during a transfer in the Strip, he told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview.
A terrorist he described as a Palestinian Islamic Jihad cyber expert later arrived with a laptop and headphones and began questioning him. Fearing his cover had been blown, Braslavski then revealed his identity.
"They immediately reduced my food by three-quarters. I was on half a pita, a bit of cheese, a rotten tomato and a small bottle of water, when before I received two or three pitas and a liter of water," he told Fox News Digital.
At that point, he was forced to walk to a sprawling complex of about 20,000 tents near Nasser Hospital. Along the way, he collapsed from hunger and exhaustion, was injected with an unknown substance and forced to continue moving.
"I was encircled by members of Islamic Jihad. Nobody told me where we were going. I cried, thinking they were either going to kill me or take me to a tunnel to torture me more aggressively," Braslavski told Fox News Digital.
"I walked without energy, breathing air as if those were my last breaths, thinking it would be the last time I would see the light of day. I kept going."
At the complex, Braslavski said tents were tightly packed with no privacy, while vehicles destroyed by missiles had been converted into makeshift shelters. The camp included donkeys and camels, and people relieved themselves in the open. He described extreme heat that made it difficult to breathe.
Braslavski remained in one such tent for four months. While the terrorist in charge instructed others not to abuse him, one of the four guards - a young man whose name he declined to share - ignored those orders.
"He did everything he could to break me. Once, he brought me food, spat in it and forced me to eat it. He humiliated me constantly. I had a small opening in the tent to breathe air, and he would come by and close it. When I told him I couldn't breathe, he would slap me and laugh with the others. He showed me videos of violence against our soldiers. He would bind my hands and feet for no reason," Braslavski said.
Although he was not supposed to be physically harmed without cause, Braslavski said the guard routinely insulted him, threatened his family and forced him into degrading acts until it became unbearable.
Braslavski told Fox News Digital the abuse left him overwhelmed with hatred, prompting him to attack the guard with all his strength and use whatever he could find around him to inflict harm, ultimately succeeding.
"He started to run to get his Kalashnikov, and I realized I could either continue or take a bullet to the head. I kept hitting him with all my strength. He became weak. I was also weak, but my body and mind disconnected from everything, and I continued," Braslavski recounted.
After three to four minutes, another terrorist intervened, and the guard Braslavski had attacked was taken to a hospital.
"The day that followed was the second darkest of my life after Oct. 7. It is marked in my memory, my soul and my body. The chief terrorist decided to respond severely to what I did, and, from there, I entered a loop of constant abuse," he said.
Braslavski said he was thereafter allowed to sleep no more than an hour and a half per day in short intervals.
During Operation Gideon's Chariots, which began in May 2025 with the stated goal of defeating Hamas and securing the return of hostages through military pressure, Braslavski said the terrorist overseeing his guards was injured and lost a family member, triggering another cycle of torture and starvation.
With each step forward in negotiations toward a deal, Braslavski said his condition gradually improved until he was released in October 2025 after 738 days in captivity.
"I have a dark past, but I must have a bright future. I want to forget what happened, although I can't. God gave me back my life as a gift - not once, but twice. I need to do at least the minimum, which is to live, rehabilitate myself and put this all behind me," he said.
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