By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Protests In Israel
Thousands gathered in
front of the central military headquarters in Tel Aviv on Saturday night to call
on the Israeli government to do more to rescue the more than 200 hostages held
in Gaza.
Between speeches in
which families of the hostages described the pain they were in, waiting for
their parents, children, and grandchildren to come home, people chanted, “Bring
them home now!”
According to the
Israeli military, various Palestinian groups, including Hamas, which controls
the Gaza Strip and staged the surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7, are
believed to be holding more than 240 hostages, taken after Hamas stormed across
the border in an assault that killed at least 1,400 people. Among the
hostages forces rescued
another one.
Before the war
against Hamas began last month, tens of thousands of Israelis had been
gathering every Saturday evening on Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv and across the
country to protest Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s judicial overhaul.
But this event was
“not an anti-government protest,” said Rebecca Brindza, an organizer.
“Every family defines
this a little differently,” said Noa Weinheber, 23, a
friend of one of the hostages, Liri Albag, 18. Ms. Albag, a soldier at the Nahal Oz military base, was taken
hostage on Oct. 7.
For the Albag family, “this is a protest,” Ms. Weinheber
said.
Still, she says she
believes that the current government is working hard to bring back the
hostages. “The question is if they’re choosing the right way to go about it,”
she added.
Maayan Matana, 27,
who came cloaked in an Israeli flag, believes the government has made the right
choice in beginning ground military operations. “There is no way to reach the
hostages if we don’t do a land invasion,” she said.
Nimrod Kerrett, a 62-year-old Tel Aviv resident, is less
confident. To him, a cease-fire is the right path forward.
Those debates are
mostly kept private. On the surface, the crowd’s message to the hostage
families was united. “We are all here for them,” Matana said. “We share their
tears and their sadness.”
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