The triggers come when I am least expecting it; the noise of a car, the bang of a door, someone speaking Arabic. And at night I think about my friends who were killed. And I start to shake. I am here, I am speaking because I want the world to know the names of my friends: Shaked Habani, Gili Hadar, Nir Forti, Roya Manzuri, Avraham.
Kfir with (centre) Shaked Habani[Missing Credit]
They were not people of violence or hatred, they were people of pure, pure love. They were angels who had their lives ended by violent animals. In my darkest moments, when I am wondering why I am still here, I remind myself I am here to say their names. I am shaking as I speak to you but I am reminding myself that the words are for them: we are one nation.
I went to Nova with a very large group of around 60 people who had been travelling around South America. When we heard the rockets, it took some time to meet my friends and decide what to do. There was already a lot of traffic when we got to the car but then two police officers ran towards me yelling, “there are a lot of terrorists around here so you need to run away right now”.
At first a few of us got in the car while Gili and Avraham decided to go and hide somewhere else. But we weren’t moving. At one point we thought about heading towards a bridge. We would go on to discover that that’s where the terrorists were congregating.