Boston Sunday Globe

Liberated Israeli captives and their families rejoice

- By Aaron Boxerman

The 13 Israeli hostages freed Friday after being abducted in the Hamas-led surprise attack last month have begun reuniting with their families, ending nearly seven weeks of uncertaint­y and fear over their fate in the Gaza Strip.

Yoni Asher, whose wife, Doron, and two daughters were abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz, was reunited with them Friday. In a video released by the Schneider children’s hospital Saturday, Asher can be seen embracing his wife and children on a hospital bed.

“Did you miss me? Did you think about Dad?” Asher asked his daughters — Raz, 4, and Aviv, 2 — to which his wife murmurs: “All the time.”

“I dreamed that we went home,” Raz said.

“Your dream came true,” Asher said with a smile. “We’re home; we’re going to our home soon.”

In another video released by the hospital, Ohad Munder Zichri, 9, runs down a hospital hallway into his father’s arms. His family also shared images of the bespectacl­ed Ohad — abducted along with his mother, Keren, and grandmothe­r Ruti from Nir Oz — playing with a Rubik’s cube.

Thirteen Israeli hostages were released in Friday’s exchange, the first group of roughly 50 expected to be freed from captivity under the terms of Israel’s cease-fire with Hamas. At least 150 Palestinia­n prisoners and detainees are slated for release from Israeli jails as part of the deal.

Gilat Livni, who is overseeing the treatment of the returned child hostages at Schneider, said the four Israeli children who had returned were “overall in generally good condition” despite their ordeal.

“Both the mothers and the children are speaking, telling stories and sharing their experience­s,” Livni told reporters, calling it “astonishin­g and emotional.”

For many families — even for those whose loved ones were released — the joy at their liberation was mixed with profound sadness for the more than 200 hostages believed to remain in the Gaza Strip. Some families were split up, with women and children sent home even as male relatives remained behind, including Ohad’s grandfathe­r Avraham.

“We’re happy, but we’re not celebratin­g. There are still other hostages in captivity,” said Roy Zichri, Ohad’s brother, in a video statement. “We need to keep up the struggle until all the hostages are freed, every last one,” he added.

‘We’re happy, but we’re not celebratin­g. There are still other hostages in captivity.’

ROY ZICHRI, brother of a 9-year-old Israeli hostage who was freed on Friday

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