Death Shelters (he|מיגוניות המוות) is a term used for the fortified shelters located at Re'im Junction and Alumim Junction, where dozens of young Israelis were killed and taken hostage while fleeing the Re'im music festival massacre on October 7, 2023.
See main article: Re'im music festival massacre.
As part of the surprise attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, fighters who Israeli sources describe as Hamas' Nukhba forces arrived at a music festival called "Nova Festival," which took place in a forest near Kibbutz Re'im on the night between October 6 and 7, 2023. Hamas forces raided the festival, killing 364 civilians and injuring hundreds of others. Additionally, 44 individuals were kidnapped by Hamas forces and other organizations to the Gaza Strip, some of whom were later released as part of a hostage exchange and "Operation Arnon." During the massacre, the militants also committed sexual assaults and rapes.[1] [2] This was the largest terrorist attack in Israel's history.[3] [4]
Israeli law has mandated shelters; known as Merkhav Mugan (Hebrew: מרחב מוגן), for several decades. The first security room or shelter was based on a 1951 civil defense law which has gone through several revisions after major events such as being targeted with Scud missiles in the Gulf War. The shelters are reportedly designed to withstand blast and shrapnel from standard weapons, and some protection against chemical and biological weapons.[5] [6]
Upon the arrival of the militants at the scene, about 30 festival-goers fled to the fortified shelter at Re'im Junction, where they sought refuge, including Aner Shapira and Hersh Goldberg-Polin. According to survivors' testimonies, Shapira was the last to enter the shelter. When Hamas militants reached the shelter, Shapira armed himself with a broken bottle and stood at the entrance to fight off the attackers. One of the militants began throwing grenades one by one through the entrance of the shelter, aiming to harm those inside. Shapira, who stood close to the shelter's entrance, intercepted the grenades and threw them back out, away from the shelter. After blocking seven grenades this way, the eighth grenade exploded in his hand, killing him.[7] [8]
Subsequently, Hamas forces and other organizations entered the shelter and violently dragged out the young survivors, some of whom were injured to varying degrees, and loaded them onto trucks to be kidnapped to the Gaza Strip. Among the kidnapped was Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who lost his hand.[9]
Some festival participants fled to Alumim Junction, where they hid in the fortified shelter at the junction. The militants reached the shelter and killed most of those inside. Noam Cohen, one of the survivors of the massacre, published "Noam's Song 2," documenting the moments of terror in the shelter, and later in a musical single with Maor Ashkenazi.[10] [11]
On June 24, 2024, the Headquarters for the Return of the Hostages and Missing Persons released a video documenting the kidnapping of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Or Levi, and Elia Cohen from the shelter.[12] The Israel National Roads Company was criticized for repainting the interior of the shelter, thereby covering up evidence of the violence and bloodshed that took place there.[13]