‘DADDY, COME BACK TO ME’ – The Heart-Wrenching Words of Fox News anchor Benjamin Hall’s daughter that Moved Millions. How a Miracle of Love brought him back to his family?
As an unflinching war correspondent, Benjamin Hall covered conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan prior to arriving in Ukraine, where his worst nightmare transpired: He became the story.
The 40-year-old was on assignment for Fox News in March 2022, covering Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
He was traveling in a car with Fox News cameraman Pierre Zakrzewski, 55, and Ukrainian fixer Oleksandra “Sasha” Kuvshynova, 24, through the abandoned village of Horenka when an explosion rocked a patch of pine and birch trees some 20 feet away.
“We’d barely turned to look before the second b0mb whistled overhead and landed right next to us and everything went dark,” Hall writes in his new memoir, “Saved: A War Reporter’s Mission to Make It Home,” out Tuesday.
Catastrophically wounded, Hall — who had volunteered a month earlier to cover the crisis, a year after deciding to pull back from the front lines for the sake of his growing family — felt himself slipping into a “deep, infinite blackness.”
“I was blacked out and I had taken a lot of injuries from the second shell,” he told The Post.

Hall lost an eye and part of his leg, as well as suffering many other injuries, from the attack by Russian drones.EMMY PARK
But then he heard a familiar voice imploring him to get out of the car.
“I saw my daughters,” he said of 7-year-old Honor, 5-year-old Iris and 3-year-old Hero. “My daughter Honor in particular came to me. And I could see her and feel her. She told me, ‘Daddy, you have to get out of the car.’”
Hall understood he had to move immediately.
“Suddenly I had awareness: I was in the back of a car,” Hall writes. “I felt like I was stuck. The world rushed back into me — light, sound, smell. The car door to my right was open, and Pierre wasn’t there. He must have gotten out. Now it was my turn …

Cameraman Pierre Zakrzewski, a friend of Hall’s, was klled in the b0mbing.Fox News
“I turned my head and tried to move, tried desperately to find the key to moving … I got my head out of the car first, through the open door, and then somehow the rest of me, and I stumbled forward.”
And then: Boom. A third explosion.
“I was on fire. Instinctively, I started rolling my body and patting my legs to smother the flames … I saw that my right leg was gone, just some flesh and bone hanging by a flap of skin, and half a foot dangling there,” he writes. “I felt compelled to take a photo of my legs. The journalist in me, perhaps. But when I took it, I realized I didn’t want [my wife] Alicia and the children to ever see it, and I deleted it.”
Hall isn’t sure if he had a “near death experience,” but firmly believes the otherworldly visit from his daughter saved his life on March 14, 2022.

Hall recalls seeing a vision of his daughters — Honor, Iris and Hero — after he was injured, and hearing Honor’s voice telling him “Daddy, you have to get out of the car.”
“I was sitting in the middle seat of that little car — the death seat — and somehow, you know, this brought me back and got me out of the car and saved my life,” Hall said of his daughter’s voice. “I honestly think that I was saved that day.”
In addition to his blown-up legs and injured hands, matchbox-size shrapnel from the blasts had lodged in his eye and neck.
And yet, he managed to flag down a car, even as his cameraman, Zakrzewski — injured and on the ground a few feet away — said in fear, “They are Russians.”
Those would be the last words Hall heard from his friend, who passed away minutes later. Kuvshynova also lost her life.

The survivor has had around 30 surgeries since the incident, with more to come.
In fact, Hall’s rescuers were Ukrainian special forces agents, who helped him get to a hospital. He was soon evacuated to Germany and later transferred to Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas, where doctors performed several of roughly 30 surgeries Hall has endured since the fateful attack — with even more to come.
The staggering extent of Hall’s injuries led surgeons to amputate his right leg below the knee, as well as his left foot.
He also needed reconstructive surgery on his left hand and now has no sight in his left eye, which Hall may eventually lose due to shrapnel that tore out his iris, lens and cornea.
“And I saw my daughters, my daughter Honor in particular came to me. And I could see her and feel her. She told me, ‘Daddy, you have to get out of the car.’”
Benjamin Hall
Still, the foreign correspondent, who was based in Washington, DC, at the time, never lost hope that his best days are yet to come.
Hall, who joined Fox News in 2015, returned to the network for the first time in January, telling viewers he felt stronger and “more confident” than ever despite his long rehabilitation ahead.
That momentum continues to grow, he said.
“It’s been a whole year of recovery,” Hall said. “And really, what I wanted to do is talk to people and tell the story and hopefully spread some positive hope at the same time.”
The process of writing his memoir — which will be released on the anniversary of the d3adly attack — proved incredibly “cathartic,” he added
He’s continuing to recover in his native London with help from his wife, Australian businesswoman Alicia.
Fox will air a documentary on his story, “Sacrifice and Survival: A Story from the Front Line,” at 9 p.m. Sunday, March 19.
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