
EXCLUSIVE I survived October 7: Gaza tourist Greta Thunberg's ridiculous 'kidnapping' claims are a slap in the face to REAL victims... now her stunt has backfired
When I read Greta Thunberg 's claim that she'd been 'kidnapped' by the Israeli military while trying to deliver aid to Gaza, I did a double-take.
Kidnapped? Really? That word carries weight among Israelis.
Greta wasn't hunted down, dragged screaming into cars, assaulted or killed, but I nearly was.
My brother and I are survivors of the Nova Music Festival massacre on October 7, 2023.
We were there to enjoy music and dance, when the day suddenly devolved into a nightmare as Hamas murderers and actual kidnappers descended on the concert grounds.
My brother and I were mere feet from death multiple times. Miraculously, we survived physically unscathed but mentally scarred.
Others did not.
Twelve hundred people in Israel were murdered on October 7. Two hundred and fifty were dragged away to Gaza. Today, too many remain missing and dozens more still are being held hostage after more than 600 days.
They were kidnapped. Greta was detained with a smile and handed a sandwich, yet this climate activist turned 'freedom fighter' dares to use the same word.
What an insult to those who are now traumatized.
However, we now see that Greta Thunberg is not concerned with such details when there are cameras to pose for.
On Tuesday evening, Greta arrived back in her native Sweden after agreeing to be voluntarily deported from Israel when her 'selfie yacht,' carrying barely a truckload worth of food, was intercepted by the IDF.
Some of the other activists who traveled with Greta chose to stay in Israel and contest their detention in the courts, but Greta knows that's not her strength. She's better in front of the microphones.
She arrived in her home country to chants of 'Free Palestine,' now recognized as a cry for global intifada, and she was draped in keffiyehs.
Though, when asked by Swedish media why she chose to join a so-called humanitarian effort alongside known terrorist sympathizers, like 'freedom flotilla' organizer Zaher Birawi , who has previously been pictured with former Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, Greta claimed ignorance.
'Should I ask exactly everyone what exactly they have said about everything?' she spat back at reporters. 'It would take some time.'
Not that much time.
Another activist who travelled with Greta on the boat was Brazilian Thiago Avila, who reportedly attended Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah's funeral in Beirut last year. Avila wrote on social media that he was 'inspired' by the Lebanese terrorist chief.
Ignorance, indeed.
Before her deportation from Israel, Greta was asked to watch footage compiled by Israel of what happened on October 7. But Greta and her compatriots refused.
If they had bothered to open their eyes, they would have likely seen the brutality of that day: people dragged, tortured, beheaded and gunned down. That is the 'resistance' that Greta seems to support.
A true 'resistance' wouldn't attack civilians, brutally rape women, mercilessly kill the innocent or use infant hostages as bargaining chips.
I once believed that Greta Thunberg was legitimately attempting to save the planet. Now, it's clear to me that she has lost her way.
She isn't helping Palestinians. She is helping Hamas manipulate the world's sympathy. But I don't think she's evil. I think she has been manipulated, like millions of others, by people smarter than her, people with agendas.
She doesn't realize that she's a pawn in their propaganda war that seeks to destroy Israel and the Jewish people.
But we're still here. Scarred. Mourning. Fighting. Trying to bring our people home. Trying to live without fear.
For many Israelis, we don't want revenge. We want our people back. We want to live in peace. But peace won't come from lies, nor will it come from PR stunts and social media posts.
It will only come when people stop repeating propaganda and start acknowledging the truth, even the parts that are inconvenient to their narrative.
So, I'll tell her myself: Greta, you weren't kidnapped. You were detained for attempting to enter a restricted warzone and flown back to Sweden.
The people who were kidnapped are either dead, traumatized or still trapped in a living nightmare.
Say their names. Tell their story. Demand their release!
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
20 minutes ago
- Times
Trump: Israeli strike on Iran ‘could very well happen'
President Trump has said that an Israeli strike on Iran 'could very well happen' after Washington scaled back its diplomats in neighbouring countries in anticipation of Iranian retaliation. Speaking at the White House on Thursday, the president said that Omani-brokered negotiations between American and Iranian officials were making progress and that Israel should show restraint because a deal could be 'close'. The comments came a day after the US said that non-essential staff working at embassies in Baghdad, Kuwait and Bahrain could leave. Washington fears that a lack of progress in talks with Iran could prompt an Israeli strike. Tehran denies having ambitions to build a bomb, but has enriched uranium to just short of the level needed to make a viable nuclear warhead. 'I'd love to avoid the conflict,' Trump said. 'Iran's going to have to negotiate a little bit tougher, meaning they're going to have to give us something they're not willing to give us right now.' On the possibility of an Israeli strike, he added, 'I don't want to say imminent, but it looks like it's something that could very well happen. Iran cannot have a bomb. Whether we get there or not [in the talks], they can't have nuclear weapons.' Asked about whether a fresh round of talks due to begin this weekend could yield a breakthrough, Trump added: 'As long as I think there will be an agreement, I don't want them [the Israelis] going in.' Doing so could 'blow it', he said. MURTADHA AL-SUDANI/ANADOLU The US thinks Israel is 'fully ready' to launch an operation against Iran's nuclear sites, the country's media reported. Tehran had threatened to target American bases in the region if it came under attack from Israel. On Thursday, the Trump administration told the Israeli government that the US would not be directly involved in any military strike against Iran's nuclear facilities, Axios reported. Steve Witkoff, the US's lead negotiator, who is expected to arrive in Oman for the next round of talks on Sunday, warned that an Iranian retaliation could overwhelm Israeli defences and inflict mass casualties. Witkoff made the warning during a closed session with Republican senators, the US news site Axios reported. The US and its Arab allies fear a conflict with Iran could turn into a regional war that threatens oil supplies and shipping. During a visit to the Middle East last month, Trump heard pleas from Arab leaders to avoid war with Iran, but he has been frustrated by the pace of the talks and Tehran's rejection of a US proposal to curb its uranium enrichment. Hossein Salami, the commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, threatened that retaliation to an Israeli attack would be 'more forceful and destructive' than last year's Iranian missile attacks on Israel. Separately, Iran announced it would build a new uranium enrichment site and upgrade centrifuges used in the process at its Fordow enrichment plant. The measure came in response to a vote by the UN International Atomic Energy Agency condemning Iran for failing to meet its non-proliferation obligations. Iran had sought to keep Fordow, which was built inside a mountain near the northern city of Qom, a secret for years. The UN discovered uranium enriched to 83 per cent — just shy of the 90 per cent needed for a bomb — at the plant in 2023. Israel denounced the move as 'an imminent threat to regional and international security and stability'. Iran has said it would hold the US culpable for an Israeli attack, raising the spectre of a repeat of its attack on a US military base in Iraq in 2020, after the assassination of its commander Qassem Soleimani in a drone strike. Pro-Iran militias in Iraq also attacked the American embassy in Baghdad. Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said on Thursday that his government would defend the rights of its citizens in a sixth round of nuclear talks with the US at the weekend in Muscat. He also said that the UN nuclear watchdog's decision to censure Iran added 'to the complexity of the discussions'. Israel had been preparing for a strike this year before Trump blocked it. He warned Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, against attacking Iran again in a phone call on Monday. Israeli patience is wearing thin, however, and western officials said this week that the country was preparing to launch strikes soon, according to The New York Times and CBS. Mike Huckabee, Washington's ambassador to Israel, told the Israeli media that it was unlikely Netanyahu would order a strike on Iran without a 'green light' from the White House. The nuclear negotiations stumbled over a US insistence that Iran no longer enrich uranium, even for civilian purposes, as part of a deal that would lift sanctions on Tehran. Iran insists on its 'right' to produce the material and has publicly rejected an initial US proposal that was presented by Omani mediators this month. Iran came into the talks weaker than ever, after Israel decimated its Hamas and Hezbollah allies in Gaza and Lebanon. Much of its air defences were also wiped out in retaliatory Israeli strikes last year. Israel believes it now has a historic opportunity to finish off the country's nuclear programme, but sceptics question whether airstrikes could destroy the deeply fortified and scattered facilities across Iran. Trump had previously asked Israel for guarantees that it would not attack Iran while the negotiations continued, but Israel could seize the opportunity if the scheduled talks for Sunday fail. The US may hope that the threat will make Tehran more flexible in the talks.


Telegraph
37 minutes ago
- Telegraph
LA riots backed by pro-Hamas activists who called for city to burn
The violent protests engulfing Los Angeles are backed by pro-Hamas activists who called for the city to be 'burned', it can be revealed. Unity of Fields (UoF) celebrated attacks on police and encouraged an 'intifada' in response to the detention of illegal migrants. They shared details of upcoming protests with their members, encouraging them to take part in the 'uprising' and to spread the unrest across the US, The Telegraph can reveal. The group also celebrated a rioter who burned a self-driving Waymo car while wearing a Hamas armband and waving a Mexican flag. 'Wearing a Hamas armband and a PFLP (Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine) headband while burning a Waymo vehicle and waving a Mexican flag at the militant anti-ICE resistance is some real unity of the fields type s—,' the group wrote of the man. Protests against ICE raids targeting illegal migrants in California, some taking place at their workplaces, erupted in the state on Friday, with some turning violent. UoF organisers encouraged the followers to intervene to thwart ICE agents from arresting illegal migrants writing: 'Direct confrontation is the only way.' Formerly known as Palestine Action US, the group formed in 2023 shortly after the October 7 attacks. UoF, a phrase referring to a unified Palestinian armed resistance against Israel, announced it was transitioning into 'militant propaganda' against the United States a year later. 'We don't mean unity for unity's sake, but the protracted struggle it will take to reach a principled, higher unity against the forces of imperialism, Zionism, and fascism,' it wrote at the time. The group was subsequently banned from social media, including Meta, but remains on X. Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, last year implored the Department of Justice to open a domestic terror investigation into the 'anti-zionist' group over fears it could harm American citizens. Using Telegram, the encrypted messaging service, the group shared details of the LA riots to 10,000 supporters, who they have dubbed the 'Hamas Marxist army''. Apple subsequently banned the Telegram channel on all iPhones and other iOS devices in recent days. But their inflammatory language has continued online, where they referred to police officers as 'pigs' and urged them to be terrorised. 'Study the way that the broader community showed up to defend the UCLA encampment from zionist pigs and the LA pig department. This kind of community defence is embedded in the ground work that is happening in LA, learn from them,' a post read. The group wrote on X: 'You know what are good optics? Burning s--- down, pushing fascists off your block, and keeping your loved ones out of the state's dungeons. (Some might even call that winning)' In a statement to The Telegraph, UoF said its 'LA Intifada is one part of the international revolutionary sequence that was opened up by the Toufan Al-Aqsa,' a reference to the Hamas massacre of Israelis on October 7. The group went on to describe as 'legitimate' the killing of two innocent Israeli embassy workers in Washington DC last month. 'We view any acts of resistance against the violence of US-led imperialism as legitimate, from the George Floyd Rebellion to the LA Intifada to Elias Rodriguez's martyrdom operation.' Mr Rodriguez has been charged with federal and local murder offences in connection with the shooting of the Israeli embassy workers on May 27. The statement concluded: 'The duty of every revolutionary is to make the revolution. Long live the global intifada!' They concluded the statement with 'Up the Ra!' seemingly a reference to the IRA. As protests spread around the country, so too did the call for violence. The Solidarity Network, a group of 'anarchist organisers' in South Florida, shared a post on social media suggesting peaceful protests do not work. Writing that they were in 'solidarity with those fighting in LA', it said: 'Riots downtown are great, but what can you accomplish in small numbers, wearing a mask at night, with your phone at home?' They wrote: 'How's your cardio? Do your friends and you have a unique sign language? Have you ever crushed up car spark plugs? Do you know how to dampen and treat tear gas and pepper agents?' The group urged those interested to turn up to join protests 'in a mask', before adding it was 'not discouraging nor encouraging any specific illegal activity'. While the groups' funding remains unclear, one billionaire with links to Shanghai is accused of bankrolling some of the radical organisations involved in this week's peaceful protests. China-based Neville Roy Singham is expected to be called to testify in front of Congress about his funding of non-profits and Marxist groups. They include the Party for Liberation and Socialism, which is thought to have organised the peaceful demonstrations against ICE officials. There is no suggestion they were involved with any of the violence that engulfed LA. 'Paid insurrectionists behind violence' Donald Trump has claimed 'paid insurrectionists' were behind the violence in California. The US president said well-equipped 'agitators' had been paid to cause chaos in the country's second-biggest city, which has been the scene of disorder since Friday. 'These are paid insurrectionists. These are paid troublemakers. They're agitators. They're paid,' Mr Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday. 'Do you think somebody walks up to a kerb and starts hammering pieces out, has all the equipment necessary and starts handing it out to people to use as a weapon? These are paid insurrectionists or agitators or troublemakers.' Using the term 'insurrectionists' opens the door to the president invoking the 1807 Insurrection Act, which would give deployed troops the power to arrest protesters. While the majority of protesters have been peaceful in Los Angeles, agitators have been turning up looking for trouble. Some have torched self-driving cars or thrown rocks, fireworks and Molotov cocktails at police. These groups, who are often dressed in head-to-toe black, their faces completely covered by masks, become more active after dark. Several journalists were shot by officers using non-lethal rounds as they covered the protests including a photographer employed by The Telegraph. Mr Trump deployed 2,000 members of the National Guard to the city, prompting a power struggle with Gavin Newsom, the California governor. A further 700 US marines have since arrived in the city. On Monday evening, police made over 100 arrests while two officers were injured. Ninety-six of the arrests were for failing to disperse in the downtown Los Angeles area.


Telegraph
37 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Prepare to back Israel in conflict with Iran
Once again, Iran's reckless pursuit of nuclear armaments has the Middle East poised on a knife-edge. The International Atomic Energy Agency has declared that Tehran is in breach of its non-proliferation obligations for the first time in 20 years, and the rogue state's response has been to declare that it will 'significantly' increase production of enriched uranium. British and American government warnings appear to signal the potential for an imminent conflict between Iran and Israel, with Jerusalem calling for a 'decisive' response to Iran's obstruction of nuclear weapons inspections. US President Donald Trump, meanwhile, is now 'less confident' that a deal can be reached on the country's nuclear programme, with Tehran adopting a hardline position on the matter. It goes almost without saying that whatever steps are necessary to prevent Iran obtaining nuclear weapons must be taken. As two direct strikes on Israel last year proved, Iran's despotic state is perfectly willing to use force to protect its terrorist proxies in neighbouring countries, and to attempt to pressure the Jewish state into abandoning its efforts at self-defence. Equally, events have made it perfectly clear where Britain's interests and allies in the Middle East are, even if Sir Keir Starmer's Government sometimes seems confused on this point. The Iranian state is a destructive and destabilising force across the region, sponsoring terrorism and fomenting chaos from Houthi strikes on vital shipping lanes to its long-standing support for Hezbollah. If permitted to obtain nuclear weapons, Tehran would inevitably feel emboldened to take these actions further, hiding behind threats of raining destruction down on any party which attempted to rein in its behaviour. This would be an untenable situation for the Jewish state. Iranian leaders have repeatedly called for its destruction, while funding those attempting to bring that about. While military action is not inevitable, if the Israeli government concludes that a targeted strike against Iran's nuclear capabilities is the only way to prevent this scenario coming to pass, Britain and America should not stand in its way. Instead, the role of the wider West now is to work with our allies in Jerusalem in working out how to best contain the Iranian threat, dismantle its nuclear power, and prevent the worst case scenario of a nuclear armed theocracy coming to pass.