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New Yorker Natalie Sanandaji, who survived Oct. 7, turns to advocacy work to find strength: ‘That’s why I’m here today’

Life has taken on new meaning for Natalie Sanandaji, one year after she narrowly survived the brutal Oct. 7 slaughter in Israel.

The Iranian-Israeli New Yorker swapped her career in real estate for work advocating for Israel and the Jewish community, addressing audiences around the country and the world and soundā™”ing the alaā™”rm on the proxy armies of the Islamic regime. 

ā€œThe persź¦•on I was before Oct. 7 was much more naive,ā€ she told The Post recently. ā€œIt was blissful.ā€

ā€œIt was so much easier than who I am now.ā€

Natalie Sanandaji narrowly survived the brutal Oct. 7 slaughter in Israel. Instagra/Natalie Sanandaji

Sanandaji, 29, who grew up on Long Island, escaped the Nova music festival with her life ā€“ as Hamas terrorists slaughtered some 370 mostly young people just like her. 

She recalled her ā€œendlessā€ hours-long odyssey to survive ā€œbeing shot at, rockets exploding overāœƒ your head.ā€

ā€œI was running for my life,ā€ she said. 

Sanandaji returned backš”‰ home to New York shortly after the attack but has returned to the Jewish state multiple times since ā€“ a pilgrimmage thatā€™s helped her heal.

The Iranian-Israeli New Yorker swapped her career in real estate for work advocating for Israel and the Jewish community. Getty Images

ā€œItā€™s not IsrašŸŒ el that tried to kill me. The party didnā€™t try to kill me. Hamas tried to kill me,ā€ she said.

During her first visit back last December, she reunited with Moshe Sati, the stranger who piled people into his truck. He wound up saving hš”er life. 

ā€œIt was like a full circle moment, going back and seeing where it all happened and the photos of all those who didn’t survive and paying my respects to them,ā€ Sanandaji recalled.

Holocaust survivor Gabriella Karin (R) listens as October 7th Nova survivor Natalie Sanandaji speaks to March of the Living participants following a havdalah service at the Tempel Synagogue on May 04, 2024. Getty Images

Sanandaji willļ·½ spend the anniversary Monday doing what sheā€™s come to love this past year ā€“ speaking to audiences about her own experiences and the dangers of antisemitism and terror as a public affairs office for the Combat Antimsemitism Movement.

ā€œThis is what I want to do most on that day ā€“ to be a part of sometą²Œhing that feels meaningfšŸŒul,ā€ she said.

While the preternaturally upbeat Sanandź¦›aji is mostly ā€œin good spirits and happy,ā€ she noted how many survivors are suffering with severe PTSD.

ā€œA lot of survivors are not OK,ā€ she noted.

Sanandaji returned back home to New York shortly after the attack but has returned to the Jewish state multiple times since ā€“ a pilgrimmage thatā€™s helped her heal. REUTERS
Israeli soldiers inspect the burnt cars of festival-goers at the site of an attack on the Nova Festival by Hamas gunmen from Gaza. REUTERS

With so many Nova survivors ā€“ including young people struggling with reintegrating intošŸŒø the world ā€“ organizations like ā€œā€ help send them to healing centers in Thailand, while nonprofits such ašŸ§”s ā€œā€ provide mental health and therapeutic services to victims of terror.

But the plucky survivor refuses to beliešŸ‘ve she was in tšŸ’Ÿhe wrong place at the wrong time on Oct. 7 ā€“ insisting itā€™s just the opposite.

ā€œI was in all the rightšŸ¦‹ places at the right time because every little decision I made ā€“ to turn left or to turn righš’t or to hide or to continue running,ā€ she said. 

ā€œI was actually in the right places at all the right times and that’s why I survived. That’s why I’m here today.ā€