“I’m from where Messi is from,” 90-year-old Esther Cunio told the two masked Palestinian gunmen who moments earlier invaded her home in southern Israel.
It was the morning of October 7 and Hamas was carrying out its attack on communities near the Gaza border, including in Kibbutz Nir Oz, where Cunio, who was born in Argentina, was living.
She spoke about the horrifying encounter in a new documentary about the Hamas rampage that focuses on the Latino-Israeli community called “Voces Del 7 De Octubre — Latino Stories of Survival”.
The two armed men were demanding to know where the rest of her family was.
“‘Don’t speak to me’, I said, ‘Because I don’t know your language. You speak Arabic and I speak Hebrew poorly’. I tell him, ‘I speak in Argentine Spanish’,” Cunio recounted.
“So he says to me ‘What is Argentina?’”
She steered the conversation towards legendary soccer forward Lionel Messi as she communicated with the intruders with broken Hebrew, Spanish and gestures.
“So I tell him, ‘Do you watch soccer?’ Then he says to me, ‘Yes, yes, I like soccer’. So I say to him, ‘I’m from where Messi is from’. Then he replies, ‘Messi! I like Messi’.”
And then, in one of the most surreal moments of the Oct. 7 rampage, one man leaned over the seated Cunio and placed his assault rifle on her lap. The other man photographed them.
“He put his hand like this,” Cunio said, extending two fingers. “And they took the picture of us, and, well, then they left.”

The picture of Cunio with an AK-47 on her lap, and the masked assailant with a Palestinian flag on his military vest, went viral on social media.
He was wearing a headband from Islamic Jihad, a smaller armed group that joined Hamas’ attack.




























