On Tuesday, January 27, after 844 days, Ran Gvili was brought home. For the first time in 4,208 days, since 2014, there are no Israeli hostages in Gaza.
This moment is a staggering achievement - even miraculous. It is worthy of deep gratitude to God and to all who refused to give up: soldiers, intelligence units, medical professionals, elected officials, and countless citizens who carried this cause in their hearts every day. A senior officer from the IDF Hostages and Missing Persons Unit, now disbanded because its mission has finally been fulfilled, said it plainly: “The scenario in which everyone returned is beyond all imagination; we did not assess that we would reach this situation.”
Ran’s return came through Operation Brave Heart (Lev Amitz), a final, heroic effort. The Alexandroni Brigade secured the area. The elite Yahalom engineering unit carefully examined each grave, fearing booby-trapped coffins. Dentists, doctors, and medical examiners worked alongside soldiers. For days they dug by hand in freezing cold, uncovering hundreds of bodies, finding nothing - until they did. Lt. Col. Eliasaf Verman described the moment, “I saw the doctor’s hands shaking over the instruments. As the examination went on, her eyes reddened and a tear fell. Then I saw a smile. For us, a very meaningful circle was closed.”
We feel relief. We feel pride. And we feel pain. Hostages were murdered in captivity. Soldiers were wounded and killed in action. Families were shattered. This moment demands that we hold competing truths at the same time. As Ran’s mother said, “Our pride is much, much stronger than our pain.”
This week’s parsha offers a haunting and powerful parallel. As the Israelites leave Egypt, the Torah pauses to tell us something that seems almost out of place: “And Moshe took the bones of Yosef with him.” At the dawn of redemption and with a nation being born, Moshe Rabbeinu carries bones.
Yosef had adjured his brothers to ensure that his remains would not stay in Egypt. Rabbi Zalman Sosortzkin, in his Oznayim LaTorah, notes a subtle difference between the initial request and the text telling how it happens. Yosef asked to be taken itchem - with you. Moshe takes the remains imo - together with him, as part of the nation’s very mission. This was not a private favor. It was a powerful statement: We do not leave our own behind. We honor those who gave their lives. We insist on dignity, even when it costs us dearly.
What was true then remains relevant today. Ran’s return is not only about closure for one family; it is a declaration of who we are.
And then there is the road itself. The most recent 843 days are but a continuation of the long and winding Jewish journey.
When the Jews leave Egypt, God deliberately does not take them along the shortest route. The Torah says, “Vayaseiv - God led them in a roundabout way.” Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik points to a Midrash that connects this word to heseibah, reclining at the Seder. Reclining represents freedom, but not freedom because life is easy. Freedom despite difficulty. Real freedom is forged on indirect paths.
Jewish history is not linear. We build, we lose, we rebuild. We achieve, we retreat, we begin again. Other nations may travel a straight line from rise to fall. Ours is a zig-zag journey, one that violates the rule that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Those detours, however, build the emunah, the faith, that allows us to keep waiting even when redemption tarries.
When Ran’s remains were finally recovered, the soldiers sang the haunting “Ani Ma’amin” song. It’s powerful refrain reverberating through the soul of all who watched the widespread recording: “V’af al pi she’yitmameiah im kol ze achake lo she’yavo - Though he may tarry, still I wait.”
The Talmud teaches (Eruvin 53b) that anything that truly matters cannot be attained easily. What appears short often becomes long; what seems unbearably long may be the shortest path of all. The Lubavitcher Rebbe framed it this way: faith, which is more emotional, is the “short path.” With faith, things fall into place. The alternate path is the intellect. It is more calculating and filled with second-guessing. It can still lead to truth, but it is longer and exacts a heavy toll.
Our journey forward as a nation continues along the long-shorter road.
We have experienced a rollercoaster of highs and lows, twists and turns. Exultation, despair, uncertainty and confidence can be experienced all in the same day. There are no shortcuts through grief or rebuilding, but this is our road that leads us forward.
This message of moving forward and looking ahead reverberates as we approach Tu B’Shvat - a holiday about planting trees whose fruits others will enjoy long after the planter is gone. It echoes in the words “V’achar kein” of the Al HaNisim prayer of Chanukah: after the victory comes the work. Winning the battle is only the beginning.
The return of Ran Gvili marks the end of one chapter - and the start of another. We move forward carrying bones, memories, faith, and responsibility. We move forward together and try to be better. The hostages and their families united us. What is our “v’acher kein?” What comes next?
We must stay engaged with the wounded, the bereaved, and those still rebuilding their lives.
We must continue to support institutions, initiatives, and learning dedicated to soldiers and victims, to speak their names and live their values.
We need to keep showing up for one another locally and globally. We can’t let ourselves be worn down with what seems like continued crisis.
Like Tu B’Shvat trees, we invest in the future in education, Jewish identity, and leadership that will bear fruit long after this moment fades.
We should allow ourselves to experience joy and pain simultaneously and not let the complexity of the moment freeze us. Growth happens when we keep walking.
Ran is home. The journey is not over. And the long-shorter road faithfully traveled remains the most optimal way forward.