“This is the first time in my life that I can actually say Chag Sameach.” 

Jerusalem, October 14, 2025 - On the eve of Simchat Torah, exactly two years after the darkest day in recent Israeli history, hundreds of Nova Festival survivors gathered in Jerusalem for a profoundly healing and hopeful holiday culminating in the joyous Hachnasat Sefer Torah procession through the streets and into the Great Synagogue.

Kesher Yehudi planned to host the Nova survivors for the complicated Yom Tov for a second year in a row, “in the merit of our hostages returning home.” No one imagined they would be celebrating the return home of all of Israel’s living hostages earlier that very day. 

The beautiful Yom Tov event was held at the Olive Tree Hotel. It included spirited tefilos, communal meals, inspirational speakers, and emotional hakafot that brought together survivors, families, and spiritual leaders in a display of faith, unity, and national resilience. Guest speakers Rabbi Michael Lasry, musician Yonatan Razel, and journalist Sivan Rahav Meir, all of whom have gotten to know the participants in previous Kesher Yehudi programming since October 7, 2023. 

It was a complicated day for all who came. It was their day of personal miracles. But also the yahrzeit of so many of their friends and family. For many, the event marked a spiritual return, not just a physical one. Together, all who attended transformed a day of national pain into one of spiritual resilience.

“This is the first time in my life that I can actually say Chag Sameach,” said Uri Hanan. “I didn’t really know what Chag was or meant [before], and until ALL of us came home, I could not be “sameach” (happy)."

The highlight of the event was the dedication of a new Torah scroll, commissioned in memory of Aryeh Cohen, brother of Nova survivor Shira Cohen. The scroll was completed during Hakafot Shniyot at the Great Synagogue with the participation of Rabbi Shlomo Moshe Amar, Rabbi David Yosef. Hundreds of supporters, including people keeping the second day of Yom Tov, were in the shul for the lively music and dancing until well after midnight.. It was funded by donors Shmuel and Leah Rieder in honor of a group of survivors who committed to keeping Shabbat in the merit of the hostages’ return, dubbed the “Shabbat Heroes.”

Popular singer Lipa Schmeltzer performed last year and was back on stage to add his energetic performance to the exciting evening. His performance inside the Great Synagogue lobby was broadcast outside for the public to see and hear.

“Last year, just before Simchat Torah, the survivors stood at Re’im, beat aravos, and declared their commitment to keep Shabbat,” recalled Kesher Yehudi founder Tzili Schneider. “They said, ‘We’ll keep Shabbat so that we can hear the voice announcing the return of the hostages." This year, that voice- ‘Kol Mevaser Mevaser V’Omer’- was heard again. The hostages are home. The circle has closed.”

Michal Ochana, who decided to take on observance of Shabbos at last year’s Kesher Yehudi Simchat Torah, spoke movingly before the crowd: “Today we dedicate a new Torah in the memory of all of our loved ones that we have lost, after two incredible days of celebrating life, and the return home of our hostages.”

“This wasn’t just a celebration. It was therapeutic. It was healing,” said Rivka Lebowitz, who participated in the Yom Tob program. “Kesher Yehudi gave survivors a space filled with such endless love”.

“After all of the discord and infighting leading up to that horrible, horrible day, Hashem needed to see that we love each other again,” said Schneider. “This group of incredible heroes helped shift the heavens.”