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Israel

'Shalit must not be forced to speak out'

October 19, 2011 10:49

By

Ruth Eglash

1 min read

Ori Shahak, who spent eight months in a Syrian jail following the Yom Kippur War in 1973, joined Gilad Shalit's family in celebrating the news of his impending release last week. But the crowds and loud cheers forced the former pilot to exit the party early.

"Today, more than 37 years after being a prisoner of war, I still cannot stand loud noises and I need silence," said Mr Shahak, chairman of Erim B'Leila ('Awake at Night'), an organisation that campaigns for the rights of prisoners of war. "I was at the Shalit protest tent when the family received the news about his release but I could not stay there too long, it was too stressful."

According to Mr Shahak, who spent much of his jail time in solitary confinement, the hardest part was being alone. "It was harder than the beatings or the torture," he said. "If I found it hard for eight months, I cannot imagine what Gilad has gone through for five years."

While it is still too early to know what exactly Shalit went through, most trauma experts who have worked with Israeli former prisoners of war agree that he and his family will, first and foremost, need peace and quiet, far away from the cameras and well-wishers.