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Supernova: One year on from the deadliest attack in music

Today marks one year since the deadliest-ever attack at a music festival, when Hamas gunmen killed 364 concertgoers and took dozens of others hostage at Supernova festival in Israel.

The Supernova Sukkot trance music gathering was stormed at 6:29 am on 7 October 2023, as part of coordinated attacks on Israel. Around 4,000 people from 36 countries attended the festival, which was held in the desert near Kibbutz Re’im – less than 5km from the Gaza Strip.

The festival was organised by promoter Tribe of Nova and staged under Brazil’s Universo Paralello brand.

Hundreds of survivors and bereaved relatives gathered yesterday at Tel Aviv’s Hangar 11 event hall for a memorial ceremony, organised by the Tribe of Nova community.

“On this evening we will stand together as one, to support each other, hear the voice of pain and longing, share stories and memories, and find comfort in the power of love and hope,” wrote Tribe Of Nova ahead of the event on Instagram.

The two-hour event featured speeches by bereaved family members, short films and music performances, and concluded with a call to release the hostages still held in Gaza – about 100, a third of whom are feared to be dead.

At 6:29 a.m today, the families of those killed at the Nova music festival, joined by Israeli President Isaac Herzog, gathered at the festival site in Kibbutz Re’im to mark the anniversary. Before the minute’s silence, organisers played the last track attendees danced to before the deadly assault.

Following the attack last year, the festival’s promoter launched a foundation to support the long-term recovery of the 3,882 survivors and bereaved families with gatherings, workshops, memorials and financial support.

Tribe of Nova said it was “shocked and pained” by the tragedy, adding that the attack was “the epitome of pure and unbridled evil”

Memorials, art exhibitions and installations have popped up across the globe since the 7 October massacre.

At this year’s Burning Man festival in the US, attendees paused at 6:29 am to honour the victims of the atrocity and an installation featuring the multi-coloured tent that stood at the centre of the festival was erected.

This installation has since appeared in an exhibit called 06:29am The Moment Music Stood Still, which was launched this year in Tel Aviv, and has since been displayed in New York, Los Angeles and Philadelphia and opens today in Buenos Aires.

The exhibit includes remains salvaged from the festival grounds, including scorched cars, bullet-riddled bathroom stalls and personal belongings, as well as video testimonies from survivors, volunteers and family members.

Last month, the BBC released a documentary about the attack called We Will Dance Again, featuring the testimony of survivors, mobile phone footage, and footage from Hamas fighters.”

It forms part of a group of programmes the BBC is producing around the 7 October anniversary, with the next set to be Life and Death in Gaza, a documentary filmed by four Palestinians documenting the humanitarian crisis following the invasion of the Gaza Strip.

 


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Supernova survivors sue Israeli government for $56m

Forty-two survivors of the 7 October massacre at Israel’s Supernova Sukkot festival are suing the government’s security forces for NIS 200 million ($56 million) in damages.

The plaintiffs filed the claim at the Tel Aviv District Court on Monday (1 January) against the Shin Bet security service, the Israel Defense Forces, the Israel Police, and the Defense Ministry, alleging multiple instances in which they failed in their duties.

“One phone call separated the plaintiffs’ lives and the integrity of their bodies and souls from the destruction of their lives,” reads the lawsuit, which is the largest tort claim ever filed in Israel against the state.

“A single phone call by IDF officials to the commander responsible for the party to disperse it immediately in view of the expected danger would have saved lives and prevented the physical and mental injuries of hundreds of partygoers, including the plaintiffs,” it continues. “The negligence and the gross oversight is beyond belief.”

According to the lawsuit, 364 attendees were killed and 40 kidnapped after Hamas stormed the second day of the trance music gathering, held near the Gaza-Israel border, as part of a wider coordinated attack on Israel. The festival, near Kibbutz Re’im, was attended by 3,500.

The claim cited reports following the massacre, which claimed senior officers in the Gaza Division expressed concerns over the party, and that the operations commander opposed it being held. It also noted that Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar held consultations the night before, and even sent a special operations team to the border the night before the onslaught.

“On the night between October 6 and October 7, at least two IDF assessments were held due to unusual incidents on the Gaza Strip border, one near midnight and another assessment close to 3 am, several hours before the Hamas attack,” the lawsuit reads.

“The negligence and the gross oversight is beyond belief”

The plaintiffs said that the IDF was unable to provide adequate security for the event since many soldiers were at home over the Simchat Torah holiday. Only 27 police officers were stationed at the festival, most of them not in possession of long arms, as required when based near the border.

Attorney Shimon Buchbut, a retired Air Force commander cited as an expert in the lawsuit, said that the IDF was negligent in giving approval for the party and that any reasonable official would not have allowed it to go ahead.

Among the damages listed in the lawsuit are loss of earnings, pain and suffering, loss of life’s pleasures, loss of future earnings, and medical expenses.

Executives from Israel’s live music industry have called the Hamas attack the “biggest-ever disaster at a music festival”, adding that business will be paused for the foreseeable future.

Festival organiser Tribe of Nova said it was “shocked and pained” in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy.

“This is the epitome of pure and unbridled evil, the horrifying and senseless murder of countless innocent angels, whose only ‘crime’ was being Jewish and living in Israel,” it added.

Nearly three months into the war, the death toll from Israeli attacks on Gaza surpassed 22,000 yesterday (3 January), according to reports from The Guardian.

 


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