



Thousands of people arrived in Jerusalem Saturday evening in the final stretch of a four-day march calling for the return of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza.
Media reports put the turnout in the final stretch at some 15,000-20,000 people.
Marchers on Saturday headed to Paris Square near the Prime Minister’s Office, where they were to join Jerusalem’s weekly demonstration for the hostages.
The march had started on Wednesday in Kibbutz Rei’im near the Gaza border, the site of a music festival where Hamas terrorists had killed hundreds of people on October 7 and abducted dozens of others. In total, some 1,200 people were murdered that day and 253 abducted.
Though they were joined by many opposition politicians, the march organizers sought to avoid too-harsh criticism of the current government, opting instead to call for unity with the families of captives while urging the cabinet to reach an immediate hostage release deal.
Earlier, ahead of the march’s arrival at Jerusalem suburb Mevasseret Zion, some 6,000 people gathered near the town’s shopping mall to hear remarks from politicians, relatives of the hostages and freed Hamas captives.
MK Mickey Levy of the Yesh Atid party, a resident and former Knesset speaker, told the crowd that he was “ashamed… that we still haven’t found an answer.”
“Israeli society will never forgive itself if the hostages don’t come back home,” he said.

Freed hostages Clara Merman, Fernando Merman, Luis Herr and Gabriella Leimberg joined the march to give families the “courage to continue.”
Fernando Merman and Luis Herr were freed last month in a dramatic IDF special forces operation in Rafah.
“We were there and the danger in captivity is imminent,” Clara Merman said. “The body and the mind still hurt. We will continue to march together with all the people until everyone returns.”
While marching, hostages’ families leading the procession addressed the massive crowds through loudspeakers hooked up to a van moving slowly at the rally’s fore.
Many relatives chose a song to dedicate to their missing loved ones, providing a wistful, yet at-times hopeful soundtrack for the thousands of demonstrators walking along Route 1 to Jerusalem.
Daniel, the brother of kidnapped American lone soldier Omer Neutra, requested Etta James’s song “At Last,” which symbolizes for him the “wonderful day when everyone has returned home.
“You sent these soldiers, you are responsible for returning them,” a friend of Omer’s said, addressing the Israeli government. “You have the ability, you need to come to a comprehensive agreement that will include all the hostages.”
Opposition Leader Yair Lapid also joined the marchers, greeting family members of the hostages at the front and giving a short speech in support of their cause.

“You ask us whether we are doing enough to return the hostages, and the answer is no,” he says. “If we were doing enough, then they would already be returning home.
“I am with you here, and we are here together, because this country cannot live with the idea that they will not return. There is no other possibility. If we must march, we will march, if we must shout, we will shout… until the hostages return home,” he continued.
Protesters reached Jerusalem in the final hour of Shabbat, and began to sing “Jerusalem of Gold” as city residents emerged from their homes to watch the crowd.
Organizers halted the rally for a moment at the city entrance under the Chords Bridge to read out the names of the 134 hostages who remain in Hamas captivity.
By the time they reached Jerusalem, protesters’ numbers had shrunk from their peak, but thousands remained to see the journey to its end.

US President Joe Biden said Friday he was “hoping” for a deal by the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins March 10, that could bring a pause to the war between Israel and Hamas and see the release of hostages.
“I’m hoping so, we’re still working real hard on it. We’re not there yet,” he told reporters at the White House.
The IDF has confirmed the deaths of 31 of those still held by Hamas, citing intelligence and findings obtained by troops operating in Gaza. One more person is listed as missing since October 7, and their fate is still unknown.
Hamas is also holding the bodies of fallen IDF soldiers Oron Shaul and Hadar Goldin since 2014, as well as two Israeli civilians, Avera Mengistu and Hisham al-Sayed, who are both thought to be alive after entering the Strip of their own accord in 2014 and 2015 respectively.
Israel and Hamas, which both had delegations in Qatar this week to hammer out details of a potential 40-day truce, have said there is still a big gulf between them, and the Qatari mediators say there is no breakthrough yet.
According to media reports over the weekend, Israel has indicated that it will not participate in further talks until it receives a list of living hostages still held by Hamas.
Axios reported that Qatar and Egypt, which mediate between Israel and Hamas, had coaxed Israel to take part in talks over the past week in Doha by guaranteeing that if an Israeli delegation were sent, they would secure a list of living hostages, and pressure Hamas to back down from its demands regarding the number of Palestinian prisoners to be released in return for each Israeli hostage.
But after three days of talks in Doha, the Israeli delegation returned home without any answers on either issue. “The mediators promised that Hamas would give numbers and that didn’t happen,” Axios quoted an unnamed Israeli official as saying.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday evening expressed pessimism that a deal could be sealed, accusing Hamas of continuing to stonewall rather than make a good faith effort at compromise.
“We face a brick wall of delusional, unrealistic Hamas demands,” said Netanyahu in a press conference at the Kirya military headquarters in Tel Aviv, adding that the terrorist group “knows its demands are delusional and is not even trying to move close to an area of agreement. That’s the situation.”
“We are all hopeful, but I’m giving you the current assessment… We continue to act, continue to hope, but I can’t make a promise at this moment” that a deal will be done, he said, because such a promise would “have no cover.”