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Freed Israeli Hostages Hug Loved Ones In Tears Of Joy

Freed Israeli hostages and their family and friends bounded into one another’s arms Monday, beaming and crying with joy at the end of the captives’ two-year ordeal in Gaza.

Wrapped in blue and white Israeli flags, those returning waved and smiled as military helicopters landed them back in Israel, AFP reporters saw, after militants freed the remaining 20 living hostages from the Palestinian territory under a US-backed ceasefire deal.

A former Palestinian prisoner (C-L), released as part of the seventh hostage-prisoner exchange, is welcomed by relatives upon arrival in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah on February 27, 2025. The bodies of four Israeli hostages were handed over by Hamas early on February 27, authorities confirmed, followed soon after by the return of another group of freed Palestinian prisoners to the occupied West Bank. (Photo by Zain JAAFAR / AFP)

 

None of the hostages spoke directly to AFP immediately after their return, but videos filmed and released by the Israeli military captured some of the raw emotion of the reunions.

“My life, you are my life… you are a hero,” cried Einav Zangauker as she embraced her smiling son, Matan, in one video.

“Love of your mother, bless you, bless you, my dear.”

Eitan Mor’s father wailed in relief as he and the young man’s mother squeezed him tight, the footage showed.

Other young hostages such as Bar Kuperstein and Yosef Haim Ohana waved from the windows of vans that brought them to the Sheba medical centre near Tel Aviv as cheering crowds nearby raised Israeli flags.

Freed Israeli-German twins Gali and Ziv Berman smiled and gave the thumbs-up, wearing the yellow and blue shirts of their favourite football team, Maccabi Tel Aviv.

 

Hostages’ Families Rejoice

Israel and Hamas on October 9 agreed a Gaza ceasefire deal to free the remaining living hostages, in a major step towards ending a war that has killed tens of thousands of people and unleashed a humanitarian catastrophe. People react at Hostage Square in Tel Aviv on October 9, 2025, following news of a new Gaza ceasefire deal. Photo by MAYA LEVIN / AFP

 

In nearby Tel Aviv, hundreds of people erupted in joy, tears, and song on Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square on Monday as news of the releases broke.

Many had come at sunrise, carrying pictures of the hostages and waving Israeli flags bearing a yellow ribbon, a symbol of the movement calling for their release.

“It’s so exciting and overwhelming that it’s finally happening,” said Shelly Bar Nir, 34.

“What we’ve been fighting for, for over two years—finally our hostages are coming home.”

Another woman on the square, Noga, who wore a badge that read “Last day,” shared her pain and joy with AFP.

“I’m torn between emotion and sadness for those who won’t be coming back,” she said.

READ ALSO: All Surviving Gaza Hostages Back Home—Israel

Hamas and its militant allies took 251 hostages into Gaza during the unprecedented October 7, 2023, attack.

Many of them were released in earlier truces, but 47 people seized on October 7 remained in Gaza. Only 20 of them are alive.

Since that day, Noga has worn a small badge each day, counting the days of their captivity.

 

‘Welcome Home’

Family and friends of Israeli hostage Ohad Ben Ami, held captive in the Gaza Strip since the October 7, 2023 attack by Palestinian militants, celebrate his release together with two other hostages by Hamas on February 8, 2025, in Tel Aviv. Hamas is set to release three Israeli hostages on February 8 in exchange for 183 prisoners held by Israel in the fifth exchange of a fragile Gaza ceasefire. (Photo by Menahem Kahana / AFP)

 

For the past two years, people have held frequent rallies and gatherings on this spot in Tel Aviv that has become known as Hostages Square.

When the news broke that the first seven of the remaining hostages had been released on Monday, the square broke out in cheers and song.

Israel later confirmed all 20 living hostages had returned to the country, with a series of posts on X that read, “Welcome home.”

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, the main organisation representing their relatives, had called on people to gather at the site with the yellow ribbons.

As the war in the Gaza Strip has dragged on, the ribbons have become ubiquitous in public spaces in Israel, from roundabouts to car door handles and stroller grips.

Israel did not expect all of the dead hostages to be returned on Monday. The families’ forum branded it “a blatant breach of the agreement by Hamas”.

“Our struggle is not over. It will not end until the last hostage is located and returned for proper burial,” the forum said in a statement.

“Only then will the people of Israel be whole.”

In exchange for the hostages, Israel is due to free nearly 2,000 prisoners held in its jails, most of them Gazans detained since the start of the war.

AFP

The post Freed Israeli Hostages Hug Loved Ones In Tears Of Joy appeared first on Channels Television.

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