Sunday marked the end of “15 months of agonizing torment and uncertainty” for Maureen Leshem of Toronto and her family in Israel.
Leshem’s cousin, Romi Gonen, was one of three hostages freed Sunday as part of a ceasefire deal that pauses the war in Gaza that began following the attacks by Hamas-led militants against Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
“Today, my heart is filled with immense gratitude and relief,” Leshem said at a news conference in Toronto Sunday.
The six-week ceasefire agreement, which outlines a plan to gradually release a total of 33 Israeli hostages in exchange for the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, officially began Sunday after a three-hour delay.
Israeli officials have said they don’t know whether all 33 of those hostages are still alive.
Gonen was abducted by Hamas from the Nova Music Festival 471 days ago. She was shot in the arm on Oct. 7, something she described to her family on the phone before she was abducted. It would be nearly two months before her family confirmed she was alive.
Leshem said her cousin faced “incomprehensible cruelty and trauma” in captivity, and her family will now begin helping her heal.
“We know that the Romi who is returning to us is not the same vibrant, joyful young lady who was stolen from us on Oct. 7,” Leshem said. “We will need to get to know a new version of Romi — and that breaks my heart.”
Palestinian prisoners also being released
About 90 Palestinian prisoners from the West Bank and Jerusalem were also set to be released Sunday.
Reem Sultan of London, Ont., who says she’s lost over a dozen family members in the conflict, said Sunday that the ceasefire is a relief for her and her surviving family in Gaza.
“I feel like bricks have been lifted off my chest,” she said.
As her cousins return home after being displaced by the fighting, Sultan said she’s grappling with images of destruction and rubble flooding her phone.
“I’m thinking, where are they going to live?” she said.
Sultan said she wants those responsible for the destruction to be held accountable, and she hopes an agreement will be reached that allows for a free Palestinian state and lasting peace in the region.
For now, she said she wants the Canadian government to push for a permanent ceasefire.
International pressure will be key for the peace to hold in the coming weeks, said Jon Allen, a senior fellow at the Munk School of Global Affairs and former Canadian ambassador to Israel. He said he’s “cautiously optimistic” the first phase of the ceasefire will continue as planned.
“I’m just hoping that … the pressure in Israel will build to ensure the rest of the hostages come out in the second phase, and that pressure will be on Hamas from the people in Gaza who do not want to see any resumption of war,” he told CBC Toronto on Sunday.
In the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, Hamas-led militants killed about 1,200 people and took about 250 people hostage. In a statement Sunday, a spokesperson for Israel Defense Forces said 94 hostages remain captive.
More than 46,000 Palestinians have died during the ensuing Hamas-Israel war and over 110,000 have been injured, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health.
Negotiations for permanent ceasefire still to come
Israel is treating the ceasefire as temporary, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Israel retains the right to continue fighting if necessary.
But many are hopeful the ceasefire may become permanent as Hamas and Israel continue to negotiate.
Phase one of the agreement includes the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners, as well as the gradual pullback of Israeli troops from populated areas of Gaza, and the increase of humanitarian aid into the war-torn region.
The second and third phases, which still have to be negotiated, would lead to a permanent ceasefire and the rebuilding of Gaza.