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Amid Palestinian joy for freed prisoners lies concern it will be short-lived

Family reunions have been playing out across east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank this week as Israel released Palestinian women and children prisoners in return for hostages freed by Hamas.

With each nightly prisoner release, the green flag of the Islamist Hamas has been raised in the West Bank, overtaking the yellow flag of Fatah, the faction that dominates the West Bank. The shows of appreciation for Hamas coincide with frustration with the ineffective and increasingly autocratic Palestinian Authority.

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Amid prisoner exchanges related to the war in Gaza, some Palestinians in the West Bank, where frustration with government is high, are flying the green flag of Hamas. It’s not a sign of support so much as a pent-up demand for change.

Yet there is an underlying wariness amid the arrests and violence still spiraling across the West Bank, and concerns that war is set to begin anew in Gaza.

“Our happiness feels incomplete with ongoing war and the losses we are seeing in Gaza,” Buthaina Matar said while waiting at a  checkpoint for her sister Rawan to be released.

Rawan, among the first batch of Palestinian prisoners to be released, stepped off the International Committee of the Red Cross bus and hugged her family. With a wary face, she said her freedom was bittersweet. “Our happiness will only be complete when the Israeli jails are truly all empty,” she said.

Nihaya Abu Al-Humus hugged and kissed her 17-year-old son, Muhammed, over and over again in the family room of their east Jerusalem home as if she hadn’t seen him in a lifetime.

“This is the dream I prayed for,” said Ms. Abu Al-Humus, cradling her son Tuesday, six months after he had been arrested by Israeli police in a roundup of local youth in his neighborhood in August.

Reunions like this have been playing out across east Jerusalem and the West Bank this week as Israel released women and children prisoners in return for Israeli hostages freed by Hamas, the militant group that rules Gaza.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Amid prisoner exchanges related to the war in Gaza, some Palestinians in the West Bank, where frustration with government is high, are flying the green flag of Hamas. It’s not a sign of support so much as a pent-up demand for change.

The releases have reunited Palestinian families, returned mothers to their children, and sent home boys and girls, mostly teenagers between the ages of 15 and 17. And they have spurred celebrations resembling rallies in front of prisons in Israel and at Israeli checkpoints in the occupied West Bank.

With each nightly Israeli release of Palestinian prisoners, Palestinians in the heart of the West Bank have raised the green flag of the Islamist Hamas, overtaking the traditional yellow flag of Fatah, the Palestinian faction that dominates the West Bank and the governing Palestinian Authority.

It is the largest and most visible expression of pro-Hamas sentiment in the West Bank since the 2007 schism in which Hamas evicted Fatah from Gaza.

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