“HANG UP THE PHONE AND PLAY DEAD”

Attending the Noval Music Festival on October 7, 2023 – “a cross between Woodstock and Auschwitz” – Yuval survived and then sang for her country.

By Jonathan Feldstein

Hang up the phone and play dead.”  This harrowing advice from Yuval Raphael’s father saved her life on October 7, 2023, and brought her to the spotlight in Basel, Switzerland as Israel’s representative to Eurovision last week.

Most Americans have never heard of Eurovision, and surely not a 24-year-old Israeli, Yuval Raphael.

Dream On. Time has passed but not the antisemitism since Theodor Herzl was photographed on a balcony in Basel in 1901. Seen last week was Nova massacre survivor and  Israel’s representative to the 2025 Eurovision in Basel, Yuval Raphael recreating the iconic image on May 16, 2025. (Bettman Archive; Nitzan Livnat/Kan)

On October 7, 2023, Yuval was at the Nova Music Festival in southern Israel along the Gaza border, located in a wooded area with an adjacent lot on which a stage had been set up for all night music and dancing.  Thousands of young people camped out all night.

Yuval and her friends fled to a crammed fortified concrete bus shelter, about 50 people taking cover in a tiny space meant for a handful of people to take cover for a few minutes from rockets that have plagued southern Israel for more than two decades. These bus shelters were meant to protect from rockets and shrapnel, not from terrorists with AK47s, RPGs, and grenades.

Before her Eurovision fame, Yuval testified at the UN:

The next thing I remember is that…one girl was just grabbing my hand really hard. She was really scared, and I was like ‘everything’s going to be okay.’”  Suddenly a Hamas terrorist stood at the entrance to the shelter shooting wildly to kill anyone and everyone. I turned around to the girl who was holding my hand, and she was no longer with us.  She was dead.”

Yuval was terrified. She called her father telling him that many people inside the shelter had been murdered.  In a conversation no parent could ever be prepared for, Yuval’s father told her to pretend that she was dead, to hide under the corpses of her friends and others, and not make any noise. Throughout the day, terrorists kept returning to the shelter, spraying the inside with bullets.

Yuval remained inside the shelter for eight hours, suffering a head wound and broken leg. Finally, after hiding underneath corpses, Yuval and ten other survivors were rescued from the shelter. Out of about 50 people inside the bus shelter, four out of five were murdered.

Yuval always loved singing, but after the massacre, both as a way to honor those lost and a means of personal therapy and demonstrating resilience, she entered Israel’s popular Hakochav Haba (“Future Star”) TV reality show; the winner of which represents Israel at Eurovision. Yuval dedicated her singing to “all the angels” murdered at the Nova festival, affirming, “Music is one of the strongest ingredients in my healing process.” Yuval won. Israeli Arab singer, Valerie Hamaty came in second, having performed with another October 7 survivor, demonstrating hope and coexistence.

Yuval arrived in Basel, targeted by terrorist supporters and numerous death threats. It’s astounding that having survived a music festival that brought people together from many nations, she was confronted by the same hatred at the world’s Super Bowl of music festivals. Throughout her time in Basel, Yuval had unprecedented security to protect her and other members of the Israeli team. She received no grace from the haters who simply branded her as evil, because of her nationality, and despite of what she survived.

At Eurovision, Yuval sang “A New Day Will Rise” conveying the message of remembering and honoring the generation of youth, Israel has lost. The song is in English, French, and Hebrew. The Hebrew verse is, appropriately from the Song of Songs (8:7): “Many waters cannot quench love, nor can rivers sweep it away.”

“Staying Alive”. When 24-year-old Yuval Raphael took center stage Saturday night at the Eurovision Song Contest in Basel, Switzerland, she stood there not only as a talented Israeli but a defiant and resilient Israeli. Just 589 days earlier, Yuval was hiding under a pile of dead bodies in a roadside bomb shelter that turned into a death trap for dozens who fled there from the Supernova music festival on October 7. Of some 50 people in the shelter, she was one of only 11 who came out alive.  (Photo: REUTERS/DENIS BALIBOUSE)     

Despite the protests against Israel that included the support of 70 former Eurovision participants and a man making a threatening gesture of slitting a throat as Yuval and the Israeli delegation walked by as well as a few countries petitioning the Eurovision to disqualify Israel, Yuval’s song gelled perfectly with this year’s Eurovision theme of “Unity Shapes Love.” 

Protester threatens slaughter as Yuval Raphael walks Eurovision Song Contest carpet with bodyguard

Explained Yuval:

 “It captured exactly the message that I want to share about resilience and unity.  The song is strong and powerful, but also soft and loving. When I sing it, I feel secure and open-hearted. All its lines are strong but, ‘Everyone cries, don’t cry alone,’ is beyond powerful. We all go through hard times, and because doing so is a shared experience, supporting and loving each other is crucial.”

Eurovision has a dual system of voting with each participating country selecting its own panel of judges and offering its highest coveted “douze (12) points” to any nation’s representative other than their own. Viewers around the world are also able to vote. Yet to prevent stuffing the ballot box and an unfair advantage of more populous countries, individual voters also cannot vote for their own nation’s representatives.

Yuval was ranked 5th place going into the competition. In the end, she won the popular vote from around the world, moving her up and finishing second only behind Austria’s representative. Israelis are full of pride and hope that despite the world’s high-profile antagonism, maybe this is a sign that the pro-Hamas Israel haters are in reality little more than a loud and unpleasant minority.

Highlighting this axis of hate was at the same time Yuval won the popular vote from the world, the Iranian-backed Houthis fired yet another ballistic missile at Israel from Yemen, sending millions of Israelis to their bomb shelters in the middle of the night.

As a woman who looked death in the eye and survived the October 7 massacre – thanks in part to her father’s haunting advice – Yuval Raphael overcame death threats in Europe and came in second.  She’s being celebrated for showing the same resilience and love for life that Israelis have demonstrated since October 7, albeit not without its trauma that we all still are dealing with.

Welcome Home Yuval. Israel’s Yuval Raphael received an emotional welcome at Ben Gurion Airport after winning 2nd place at Eurovision 2025!   Capturing hearts across Europe, Yuval is not only a musical talent but also a survivor of the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre at the Nova music festival.

It is that same genocidal hatred and threats against Jews, exemplified in Basel with that pro-Hamas protester making a gesture toward Yuval that he was going to slit her throat, that nurtured the people and the ideology that gave rise to October 7.

Citizens of the world would be wise to remember this, and celebrate along with Israelis even if they had never heard of Eurovision or Yuval Raphael before.

Yuval Raphael – New Day Will Rise (LIVE) | Israel 🇮🇱 | Grand Final | Eurovision 2025 (click on the picture or the caption)




About the writer:

Jonathan Feldstein ­­­­- President of the US based non-profit Genesis123 Foundation whose mission is to build bridges between Jews and Christians – is a freelance writer whose articles appear in The Jerusalem Post, Times of Israel, Townhall, NorthJersey.com, Algemeiner Jornal, The Jewish Press, major Christian websites and more.





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