An Israeli woman recently discovered—three months after the fact—that she had been shot in the back while attending a wedding in Samaria, Israeli media reported.
Adi Bloy was celebrating at a friend’s wedding at Psagot Winery, located northeast of Jerusalem near the Palestinian village of Mukhamas, when she felt a “crazy, sharp pain” in her back,” she said in an interview for Channel 12 News.
When she held her finger on the spot, she found a small amount of blood. So she went to the bathroom to check, and there she passed out for a few minutes. However, because she nor her girlfriends could find a reason for the pain, Bloy stayed at the ceremony, though she remained seated.
After the event she visited her doctor, who prescribed antibiotics. However, the pain persisted, and a CT scan found a metallic object lodged in her back, near her spine.
It is still unclear how the bullet got there. The Israel Defense Force told Army Radio that there were no reports of gunfire on the night of the wedding.
“I was saved by a miracle,” Bloy told Army Radio, as doctors informed her that had the bullet been a few centimeters this way or that way she could have suffered from significant and even greater life-altering damage. She still experiences neck and back pain, as well as emotional trauma.
Bloy is now seeking recognition as a terror victim from the National Insurance Institute and the Defense Ministry, according to media reports.