As Israel marked two years since the October 7 attacks on Tuesday, messages of remembrance and anger at the plight of hostages in Gaza poured in amid high expectations over talks in Egypt to reach a ceasefire with Hamas that could bring about their release.
Religious legislators, who make up much of the far-right cabinet, were offline for the Sukkot holiday, but opposition leader Yair Lapid posted on X that Israel “will remember and never forget”, and paid tribute to the hostages in Gaza, their families and Israeli soldiers.
The Democrats leader Yair Golan, who helped Israelis escape from Hamas during the attacks, toured the site of a music festival where around 400 people were killed. "Two years later, the wound is still open, 48 of our brothers and sisters are still there in hell," Mr Golan posted on X while at the site, referring to the number still being held captive.
Rebecca Bohbot, whose husband Elkana was taken hostage, posted on X: “I have no words left any more − enough is enough. Bring Elkana and all the hostages home now. Immediately.”
Eli Sharabi, who was freed from Hamas captivity in February, paid tribute to his wife and two daughters who were killed on October 7. He also called for the return of the body of his brother, which is still in Gaza.

“On 7/10/23 our peaceful and happy life became hell, mourning and unimaginable loss that will accompany me every moment until my last day,” he posted on Facebook.
“These days, I and the whole Sharabi family are holding our breath in the presence of hope, for the return of Yossi my brother for a proper burial, and the return of Alon Ohel, my dear friend, and all the hostages. We’ve suffered enough, we deserve a different reality. We want to start healing."
Israel’s army has killed more than 67,000 Palestinians in Gaza and injured at least 169,000 since the 2023 attacks in which Hamas and other militants killed around 1,200 Israelis and took about 250 people hostage.
The mass movement to pressure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to secure a deal to free the remaining 48 hostages, of whom about 20 are thought to be alive, staged a flurry of demonstrations in recent days after US President Donald Trump put forward a plan that many Israelis view as the last chance to save the surviving captives.
Activists set up a Sukkot meal on the street near Mr Netanyahu’s Jerusalem residence. Einav Zangauker, the mother of a hostage who used to support Mr Netanyahu politically but is now one of his most recognisable critics, issued a direct message to Mr Trump: “President Trump, please end this nightmare. Please make it happen. We can’t live without them.”
In Tel Aviv, women's activists in Dizengoff Square organised a vigil. The organisations involved said the day was “the moment of truth for the government of Israel”.

“The people of Israel demand everyone home and will not forgive those who sabotage this opportunity. October 7, 2023 will only end when a deal is signed for ending the war and bringing all remaining hostages home,” the activist group said.
World leaders also expressed solidarity on Tuesday. French President Emmanuel Macron posted on X that France stands “in solidarity with all the victims, including 51 of our fellow citizens … such an abomination must never happen again. Let us unite all our strength to fight anti-Semitism everywhere and to build peace”.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer paid tribute to victims and said the UK’s priority is to bring about the release of hostages, “surge” aid into Gaza and find “a ceasefire that can lead to a lasting and just peace as a step towards a two-state solution”.