Matan Angrest: 'You’re finally back, my brother'
Body of IDF soldier Itay Chen, killed fighting Hamas on Oct. 7, returned to Israel
Chen, 19, was last remaining hostage with US citizenship; 7 slain captives remain in Strip; army said to believe all can be found; IDF chief said to demand Hadar Goldin’s body in exchange for safe passage for Hamas fighters
by Emanuel Fabian Follow You will receive email alerts from this author. Manage alert preferences on your profile page You will no longer receive email alerts from this author. Manage alert preferences on your profile page and ToI Staff · The Times of IsraelMilitary representatives notified the family of Staff Sgt. Itay Chen that his body was returned to Israel by Hamas on Tuesday night, following the completion of identification efforts by forensic experts.
Chen, 19, served in the 7th Armored Brigade’s 77th Battalion and was killed while battling Hamas terrorists in his tank during the morning of October 7, 2023, in the Nahal Oz area. His body was then abducted to the Strip, along with other members of his crew.
He was the last remaining slain hostage held in the Gaza Strip with American citizenship. The remains of seven other slain hostages are still in Gaza.
According to a Hamas statement, Chen’s body was recovered earlier Tuesday during excavations in Gaza City’s eastern Shejaiya neighborhood, which is over the Yellow Line demarcating the military’s withdrawal, meaning in an Israeli-held area of the Strip.
The terror group transferred the casket in the evening to representatives from the Red Cross in Gaza City, who then escorted the remains to IDF troops inside the Strip.
The IDF inspected the casket, draped it in an Israeli flag and held a short ceremony led by a military rabbi, before taking it out of the Strip.
Chen’s body was escorted by police to the Abu Kabir forensic institute in Tel Aviv for identification. Hamas has, in the past, transferred remains that did not belong to a hostage.
Chen was killed alongside fellow tank crew members Sgt. Tomer Leibovitz and Cpt. Daniel Perez, and his body was abducted together with Perez’s.
Perez’s remains were returned last month, and the tank crew’s fourth member, Matan Angrest, who was abducted alive, was released on the same day.
Speaking at Perez’s funeral, Angrest promised to keep fighting for Chen’s return and even said he was “ready to go into Gaza right now and bring him back.”
On Wednesday, Angrest eulogized his slain comrade.
“I never stopped thinking of you,” he wrote on Instagram. “You’re finally back, my brother.”
The family of Chen, a US national, has been among the most outspoken proponents for the families of hostages and decided not to sit shiva for him until he was returned and laid to rest.
“[After] 760 days, Itay is back home,” his father Ruby Chen wrote on X.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke with Chen’s family after his remains were returned to Israel from Gaza, the premier’s office said.
Chen’s parents, Ruby and Hagit, asked Netanyahu to continue working to bring home the seven deceased hostages whose bodies are still being held by Hamas.
The terror group handed over the bodies of three other deceased hostages to Israel on Sunday. On Monday morning, their identities were confirmed as IDF soldiers Col. Asaf Hamami, Cpt. Omer Neutra and Staff Sgt. Oz Daniel.
‘Wonderful son’ last heard from at 6:40 a.m. on Oct. 7
Chen, 19, was on active duty, part of a tank unit at the Nahal Oz army base that included three other soldiers, when Hamas-led terrorists attacked southern Israel on October 7, 2023.
The dual US-Israeli citizen was last heard from at 6:40 a.m., when the terrorists invaded the Gaza border communities, including the area where Chen was stationed.
One week later, Chen’s younger brother, Alon, celebrated his bar mitzvah in a small ceremony in Netanya. Thousands of neighborhood residents came out to support the family and Chen’s parents, US-born Ruby and Hagit, and to pray with them for news about Itay.
The Brooklyn-born Ruby Chen said his son had stayed at the base during the Simchat Torah holiday weekend so that he could return home for his younger brother’s bar mitzvah the following weekend.
Ruby Chen said the last he heard from his “wonderful” son was that his base was under heavy bombardment.
The IDF officially confirmed Chen’s death on March 10, 2024, stating that he had been killed during the October 7 onslaught.
Families forum ‘will not rest’ until all are home
In a statement issued after Chen’s body was identified, the Hostages Families Forum vowed not to rest until all seven remaining hostages’ bodies were returned.
“Alongside the grief and the understanding that their hearts will never be whole, Itay’s return provides some measure of comfort to a family that has lived with agonizing uncertainty and doubt for over two years,” the forum said. “We will not rest until the last hostage is brought home.”
Under the terms of the ceasefire that took effect last month, Hamas is obligated to return all hostages in its possession and provide all the information it has regarding where the bodies of hostages can be found. Families of the deceased captives have stressed the importance of returning them to Israel for burial.
Since the ceasefire began — the first stage of a 20-point peace plan proposed by US President Donald Trump — Hamas has released the last 20 surviving hostages and the bodies of 21 deceased hostages, with seven now remaining in the Strip. The process of finding the bodies has been painstaking and has drawn in international assistance.
But Israel has assessed that Hamas can return most of the deceased hostages. According to a report on Channel 12 on Tuesday, Israel believes that it will be possible to return all the bodies of the remaining hostages held in Gaza, with “strenuous work and cooperation” with Hamas and other parties over time.
The report said Israel knows the locations of at least four of the dead hostages. The network cites three defense officials as saying that the remaining three can also be returned, though it will take time.
“This can take time, and there are further moves that need to be carried out on the ground, but in the end, it will be possible to return them all for burial in Israel,” a defense official is quoted by Channel 12 as saying.
The seven slain hostages still in Gaza include six who were kidnapped in the Hamas-led onslaught on October 7, 2023, and the body of Lt. Hadar Goldin, who was killed fighting Hamas in Gaza in 2014 and whose body has been held in the Strip since then.
The IDF may press for the return of Goldin’s body by offering safe passage to an estimated 200 Hamas operatives hiding in tunnels in southern Gaza, under the Israeli-held side of the Strip, if the terror group agrees to transfer Goldin’s remains. The operatives would then be allowed into the Hamas-run side of the Strip.
According to a report on Channel 12 on Tuesday, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir recommended the exchange to political officials.
“No terrorist will leave Rafah alive. I am willing to consider the release of terrorists [from Rafah] on one condition — returning Hadar Goldin. Otherwise, no terrorist will leave Rafah alive,” the network quoted Zamir as saying.
The report said Israel believes Goldin’s body is buried in the Rafah area in southern Gaza.