Seated in the visitor’s locker room, players for an Israeli basketball team were preparing before their preseason game against the Minnesota Timberwolves, but they admitted it was hard to focus 10 days after a deadly attack by Hamas killed more than 1,400 Israelis, plunging the region into conflict.
“You think all the time about your family, your friends,” said Ori Hai, 24, who plays for Maccabi Ra’anana. “You can’t really focus about basketball. That doesn’t matter right now.”
Ra’anana concluded its three-game tour in the U.S. by playing the Timberwolves, playing the games while Israel is at war with Hamas, the militant group governing the Gaza Strip. Players and coaches decided they would continue the games after learning of the war while abroad. One Ra’anana player returned home after the war began.
Hai and his teammates were stretching in the locker room while wearing shirts with photos of people kidnapped by Hamas, with the caption “bring them home now,” written underneath. Hai’s shirt was of a toddler boy who was taken.
Earlier Tuesday, a blast went off at a hospital in Gaza, killing more than 500 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry. At least 3,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israel’s retaliatory airstrikes since the war began, the ministry reported Tuesday.
Both Hamas and Israel have denied responsibility and pointed at the other side for the explosion at the hospital.
The pregame ceremony included a moment of silence in support of those killed “in Israel,” and a performance of the Israeli national anthem. A handful of people in the stands held up Israeli flags and signs supporting the country.
Asked about the war in a pregame news conference, Ra’anana coach Yehu Orland said it’s “really sad for both sides,” and that he did not wish to comment more on the politics of the situation. In a previous game, Orland wore a shirt in honor of a friend who was shot and killed in Israel.
“It’s hard to explain the sadness to lose someone that close and to know that he left behind four young kids,” Orland said
The coach discussed the importance of continuing the games and finishing the series before returning as a way to give people hope back home.
“The desperation is so deep. … There’s a lot of kids, young people that need hope,” Orland said. “For us, playing over here, maybe it’s one step towards showing that Israel is a strong country,” the coach said.
Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said he thinks it showed “great courage” for Maccabi Ra’anana to continue.
“I think that’s very important for them, and for the strength and the psyche of their country,” Finch said.
He called the war “shocking and heartbreaking in its scale.”
Before the game, Hai said it was hard to prepare mentally, adding that his family knows someone killed in the Hamas attack. Growing up in Israel, fighting has happened “all the time” and he’s seen rocket attacks before. But he said this war is on a different level. Hai said he also feels sad for the innocent Palestinians who have been killed.
“I hope that the war will end as soon as possible without any more citizens getting killed,” he said.