Families of Hostages and Gazans Feel Forgotten as War Heats Up in Lebanon

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Talks to reach a potential cease-fire in Gaza and free the remaining 100 or so hostages have stalled.

A crowd of people hold up posters and a banner Saturday in Tel Aviv calling for a hostage deal. One person raises an arm, releasing yellow smoke above the crowd.
Families of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip rally in Tel Aviv on Saturday to call for a deal for their release.Credit...Amir Levy/Getty Images

Aaron Boxerman

  • Sept. 24, 2024, 11:58 a.m. ET

After six Israeli hostages were found dead recently in Gaza, shocking the country, the families of the remaining captives hoped that the tragedy might pressure Israel to accept a cease-fire agreement to secure their release.

But now, as Israeli fighter jets swoop over Lebanon and Hezbollah fires rockets into northern Israel, the conversation in Israel has shifted toward a potential war in the north. Few believe that an agreement to free their loved ones in Gaza is imminent.

After nearly a year, roughly 100 of the more than 250 hostages held hostage by Hamas since their Oct. 7 attacks remain in the clutches of Palestinian militants in Gaza. They include women and older people kidnapped from their homes, as well as soldiers abducted from military bases.

Israel and Hamas are deadlocked in negotiations over conditions for a truce that would free them. The Israeli authorities have declared that more than 30 hostages are already presumed dead, and their families fear that number will only rise as their loved ones languish in captivity.

With all eyes on Israel’s escalating battle with Hezbollah in Lebanon, many families now fear any hopes to save the hostages are rapidly vanishing, said Itzik Horn, whose sons Eitan, 38, and Iair, 46, are still held.

“We’ve been abandoned again and again” by the Israeli government, said Mr. Horn. “And now, the resources and attention are heading to the north.”


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