The family of Israeli-American hostage pleads with Biden and Trump to
bring hostages home
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[November 16, 2024]
By MELANIE LIDMAN
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — Over the past two weeks, the political landscape
around the negotiations for a cease-fire in Gaza have undergone a
dramatic transformation.
The American elections, the firing of Israel’s popular defense minister,
Qatar’s decision to suspend its mediation, and the ongoing war in
Lebanon all seem to have pushed the possibility for a cease-fire in Gaza
further away than it has been in more than a year of conflict.
Still, some families of the dozens of hostages who remain captive in
Gaza are desperately hoping the changes will reignite momentum to bring
their loved ones home — though the impact of Donald Trump returning to
the White House and a hard-line new defense minister in Israel remains
unknown.
“I think maybe there is new hope,” said Varda Ben Baruch, the
grandmother of Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander, 20, a soldier
kidnapped from his base on the Gaza border during the Hamas attack on
Oct. 7, 2023.
Alexander’s parents, Adi and Yael Alexander, who live in New Jersey, met
this week with Trump and President Joe Biden in Washington and pleaded
with them to work together to bring all the hostages home in a single
deal.
“As a grandmother, I say, cooperate — Trump wants peace in this region,
Biden has always said he wants to release the hostages, so work together
and do something important for the lives of human beings,” Ben Baruch
said.
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She said neither leader offered specific details or plans for releasing
the hostages or restarting negotiations for a Gaza cease-fire.
Talks have hit a wall in recent months, largely over Hamas' demands for
guarantees that a full hostage release will bring an end to Israel’s
campaign in Gaza and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s vows to
continue fighting until Hamas is crushed and unable to rearm.
“We’re not involved in politics, not American and not Israeli, the
families are above politics, we just want our loved ones home,” she
said. “Edan was kidnapped because he was Jewish, not because he voted
for a certain party.”
More than 250 people were kidnapped and 1,200 killed when Hamas
militants burst across the border and carried out a bloody attack on
southern Israeli communities. Israel’s campaign of retaliation since has
killed more than 43,000 Palestinians, according to local health
officials, and some 90% of its 2.3 million people have been displaced.
As militants attacked on the morning of Oct. 7, Edan Alexander, then 19,
was able to send a quick message to his mother amid the intense fighting
around his base. He told her that despite having shrapnel embedded in
his helmet from the explosions, he had managed to get to a protected
area. After 7 a.m., his family lost contact.
Alexander was considered missing as the family desperately searched
hospitals for him. After five days, friends recognized him in a video of
Hamas militants capturing soldiers.
The family was happy: He was alive, Ben Baruch said. "But we didn’t
understand what we were entering into, what is still happening now.”
When a week-long cease-fire last November brought the release of 105
hostages in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners, some of the freed
hostages said they had seen Alexander in captivity. Ben Baruch said they
told her Alexander kept his cool, encouraging them that everyone would
be released soon.
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Varda Ben Baruch, whose grandson Edan Alexander is held hostage in
the Gaza Strip by Hamas militants, gestures to a Torah scroll in his
bedroom at home in Tel Aviv, Israel, Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024. (AP
Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
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Ben Baruch said she was disheartened when Netanyahu last week fired
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who she said had consistently
reassured the families that the hostages were at the top of his
agenda.
“I felt he was a partner,” she said. Gallant was replaced by a
Netanyahu loyalist who has urged a tough line against Hamas.
A mass protest movement urging the government to reach a hostage
deal has shown signs of weariness, and hostage families have
struggled to keep their campaign in the headlines. A delegation of
former hostages and their relatives met with the pope on Thursday
and expressed hope the incoming and outgoing American
administrations would bring their loved ones home.
In Tel Aviv’s Hostage Square, the headquarters of the protest
movement, opinions were mixed on the effect of Trump’s election on
hostages.
“I don’t think this is good for Israel or the hostages, I’m really
scared of him,” said David Danino, a 45-year-old hi-tech worker from
Tel Aviv. He was at Hostages Square with his family, visiting from
France, who wanted to pay their respects.
Danino noted that Israel had already achieved many of its war goals,
including killing Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah. “They are building us a photo of what is
‘victory,’ but how is there victory without the hostages?” he asked.
Others thought Trump’s reputation might help the situation.
“When he decides to do something, he does it, without blinking, and
he can create ultimatums,” said Orly Vitman, a 54-year-old former
special education teacher from the Tel Aviv suburb of Holon.
She comes every few months to the square with her daughter to light
candles in honor of the hostages. While she was opposed to the
firing of Gallant in the middle of the war, she was heartened by
Trump’s election.
“We will have the legitimacy and ability to use the full force of
what we know how to do,” she said.
Ben Baruch, a philanthropist and accomplished artist whose modernist
sculptures dot the Tel Aviv home where she has lived for 52 years,
said she has pushed everything aside in her life to focus on the
struggle to bring her grandson home. Her days are filled with
meetings, interviews, rallies, protests and communal prayer sessions
uniting different groups of Israelis from across the religious
spectrum.
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“It’s like people’s lives went back to their routine, but ours did
not,” she said. “There’s nothing left to say. All the words have
been said. We have heard everything. We have met with everyone. But
they are still there.”
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