Iair Horn spent 498 days trapped in Hamas’ dark tunnels, eating scraps and praying for freedom. Now he’s begging former President Donald Trump to rescue his little brother Eitan from the same nightmare. “I need President Trump to be a modern Moses,” Iair told Fox News. “He saved me. Now he must save my brother.”
Hamas terrorists kidnapped both brothers during their bloody October 7th attack. Iair survived hunger, sickness, and constant fear underground. “No sunlight. Little water. Just hell,” he said. His brother remains a hostage, trapped with the same killers who burned homes and murdered families.
Trump’s leadership freed Iair earlier this year, but Eitan wasn’t so lucky. A recent Hamas video shows the brothers hugging goodbye before Iair’s release. Eitan begged Prime Minister Netanyahu to “sign the deal” and free everyone. “I’m not okay here,” Eitan said in the clip. “Get us all out now.”
The Horn family vows to keep fighting. Iair’s mother Ruth says every delay risks more coffins coming home. “Hamas starves our boys while the world debates,” she cried. “Stop the talks. Bring them home alive.” Iair agrees, saying the hostages “don’t have time” for politics.
Conservatives praise Trump’s strong stance against Hamas, contrasting it with weak leaders who negotiate with terrorists. “Trump gets results,” said one Fox analyst. “He doesn’t coddle murderers or abandon allies.” Meanwhile, critics blast Netanyahu for prioritizing military strikes over hostage rescues.
Iair’s story exposes Hamas’ cruelty. These terrorists film goodbye videos to torment families. They separate brothers and mock desperate parents. Their lies fool no one—Eitan’s tired eyes in the footage scream the truth. Hamas thrives on suffering, but America’s strength can crush them.
The clock ticks for Eitan and 57 others. Every sunset risks another death in those tunnels. Iair knows this horror firsthand. “No more delays,” he demands. “Trump broke chains before. He must do it again.” Freedom shouldn’t depend on deals with killers. Real leaders rescue hostages, not make excuses.
This Passover, the Horn family prays for miracles. They need a modern Moses to part the Red Sea of bureaucracy and bring their son home. Until then, Iair won’t rest. “My brother is alive,” he said. “We must save him while we still can.” The world watches—will weakness condemn these men, or will strength prevail?