



Family members of those missing and held hostage in Gaza were accompanied by thousands of Israelis on the fifth day of their march from Tel Aviv to the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, which they plan to reach on Saturday afternoon.
There was no immediate comment from police on how many people were marching toward Jerusalem, however protest organizers said there were tens of thousands walking toward the capital. Channel 12 news said there were some 20,000 marchers.
The march was set to enter Jerusalem at around 2:30 p.m. ahead of a protest at the Prime Minister’s Office at approximately 4 p.m.
At the conclusion of the protest, the families were to return to Tel Aviv and meet with war cabinet Minister Benny Gantz and cabinet observer Minister Gadi Eisenkot.
A statement on behalf of the families said they had not received a response to their request for the meeting from the other war cabinet ministers — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and cabinet observer Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer.
At the conclusion of the meeting, a rally will be held at 8 p.m. outside the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, in an area dubbed “Hostages Square.”
The marchers spent Friday night at Ein Hemed, where they held a service for Shabbat and the traditional meal.
Gantz arrived at the site and spoke with relatives of hostages, embracing many of them.
“How do we welcome Shabbat without knowing where our loved ones are being held?” said Naor Pakciarz, the representative of the families of Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the worst-hit communities in the October 7 massacre.
“We have a message for the war cabinet — it cannot be that you make a decision without sitting with us and looking us in the eye. Look us in the eye!” Pakciarz said.
Throughout their march on Friday, the families of the hostages marchers were joined by thousands of supporters in a large procession at the side of the Route 1 highway between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
As they marched past the Haredi community of Kiryat Ye’arim, dozens of supporters were waiting with yellow balloons and speakers blasting out the prayer for the return of those held hostage or captive.
The march came as US President Joe Biden held another call Friday with Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani and pressed him on the “urgent need” for the roughly 240 hostages “to be released without further delay,” the White House said, intensifying its rhetoric regarding the urgency of the issue.
The phone call came amid reports that Israel is balking on an initial, partial deal that would keep some mothers in Gaza while their children went free.
After previous hostage deal proposals would have seen parent hostages separated from their children abducted with them in Gaza, the war cabinet informed mediators that under no circumstances would Israel accept the separation of mothers from their children.
According to the report, the latest Qatari proposal from Tuesday would see 50 hostages freed in return for a five-day ceasefire and the release of 150 female security prisoners being held in Israel.
However, as this would see some mothers separated from their children, Israel refused and is demanding that all mothers and children be released together, the report said.
According to Channel 12, Netanyahu urged Biden to try to secure the release of at least 70 hostages in all.
Meanwhile, Hamas issued a statement warning Israel not to drag its feet.
The recorded statement from the military wing spokesman, who goes by the name of Abu Obeida, warned Israel that the hostages “could become forgotten.”
He also said that the longer the hostages remain in captivity, the greater the chances of them being killed. Hamas has on several occasions claimed that hostages have been killed in Israeli strikes. Israel denounces these claims as psychological warfare and propaganda.
Hamas also published a video Friday apparently showing 86-year-old Aryeh Zalmanovich, one of the hostages being held in Gaza.
The footage raises concerns regarding Zalmanovich’s well-being.
As was the case with previous clips of hostages broadcast by terror groups in recent weeks, Israeli media did not publish the footage, out of respect for the families of the abducted and not to lend a hand to the psychological warfare being employed by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
On Monday evening, Hamas published a propaganda video of Noa Marciano, showing her speaking to the camera four days after being taken hostage, identifying herself and reciting the names of her parents and her hometown. The video then cut to her dead body.
On Thursday, thousands of marchers in the procession of hostage families arrived in the central city of Modiin, where they stopped to pay a shiva call to the Marciano family.
Marciano, 19, of the Combat Intelligence Collection Corps 414th unit, was serving on the Nahal Oz IDF base when it was overrun on October 7.
Speaking to the families of the hostages in Modiin, Noa’s mother, Adi Marciano, thanked them for coming and said that she had originally been supposed to march alongside them, before the news of her daughter’s death reached her.