Is it a harrowing nightmare or a test of faith?
Dr. Tsafi Timor is an Israel-based author, lecturer, therapist, and scholar with expertise in Psychology, special education, English literature, and language. She holds a PhD in leadership and special education and an MSc in Psychology from the University of
Leicester, UK. Tsafi has published two nonfiction books and two novels, including the acclaimed Walking a Tightrope and her latest memoir, Footprints. She is a member of the Association of Hebrew Authors.
The lights glowed at Gaya and Chagai's home in Kibbutz Benjamin as the family gathered for Simchat Torah dinner. Just hours later, at 6:30 a.m., sirens pierced the air. Hamas terrorists breached the Gaza border in a coordinated assault that devastated Kibbutz
Benjamin, Kibbutz Asher, Judah, and other communities in the Gaza border region, while turning the Nova music festival into a massacre. Dor, Rona, and Daniel were dragged from their beds, forced toward Gaza, their lives overturned in an instant. For three hundred days, Leora, a ninety-four-year-old Holocaust survivor, endured captivity with Merav and Daria from the festival, Chaya the kibbutz nurse, old and young, wounded and bleeding.
Stripped of food, air, and dignity, they were kept in suffocating heat, yet the responsibility they took for each other kept them alive. October 7: A Story of Courage and Resurrection is a novel of resilience and solidarity - fiction inspired by the horrors of that day.
Above ground, Chagai, an IDF combat pilot, faced a paralyzing dilemma: how to strike Hamas without endangering his twin brother Dor below, while Captain Tal and his unit risked their lives in rescue attempts where hostages' safety mattered more than their
own.