♪ good evening. you are watching a special edition of "the source" tonight. i'm kaitlan collins live in tel aviv alongside pamela brown in washington. israel does have the list of hostages set to be released on saturday, the second day of the temporary agreement they have struck with hamas. sources tell me there are several children on that list. though of course what actually happens remains to be seen. we saw it happen today. it was a minute by minute basis. right now we are hours away from what is expected to be day two of that expected four-day truce. we know that the first group of hostages held by hamas are back in israel tonight. they're receiving medical treatment after a journey that took them through egypt, and eventually here back home. that includes this children's hospital near tel aviv, where eight hostages are being treated tonight, four children, their mothers, and one grandmother. doctors are telling us they are in good condition. they are getting this initial medical assessment underway. in total today what we watched happen, 24 hostages, 13 israelis, 10 thai citizens, one filipino all evacuated earlier today from war-torn gaza. >> and of those released today, none were american. but despite that, president biden says he is hopeful that at least a few will be freed in the coming days. >> we don't know when that will occur, but we're going to be expecting it to occur. and we don't know what the list of all the hostages are and when they'll be released, but we know the numbers are going to be released. so, it is my hope and expectation it'll be soon. >> and of the ten americans that are unaccounted for, do you know all of their conditions? are they all alive? >> we don't know all of their conditions. >> by the end of this four-day pause in fighting, 50 hostages are expected to be freed. also part of the deal, dozens of palestinian prisoners will be released and critical aid will flow into gaza. >> i want to bring in cnn's chief global affairs correspondent, matthew chance, who has been covering this entire story closely today. what the we are seeing tonight is this video being put up by hamas, obviously a propaganda video. we should note there's all the caveats with this video. what do we see in it when it comes to how they're releasing the video? >> pretty extraordinary video. there's no sound on it. you just see the picture. you see the masked hamas gunmen dressed in military fatigues escorting their prisoners, the hostages, israelis and others, to the red cross, the international committee of the red cross, which is part of the handover, as the crowd is around them. you can see them jeering and taking photographs and things like that. it's particularly disturbing, couple of shots disturbing. there's one 9-year-old, ohad monder, little boy, being held, embraced by a masked gunman, as he's taken to the icrc. there's another shot as well of a lot of elderly people released today and hamas gunmen carrying one of these elderly women in his arms and putting them inside the truck. i mean, it's particularly disturbing because you've got to remember a lot of these people are from nir oz, which is a small kibbutz in southern israel near to gaza. and there were so many people there killed. 38 people there were killed, their neighbors, their friends, their family members. 77 people were abducted. so, there's been some kind of release today. but there's lots more neighbors that are still inside gaza being held by those same people essentially who are escorting them out. >> what i was struck by is the crowd around them in this video. it's not just the hamas fighters taking these hostages. there's all these people that you can see in the video surrounding them. >> yeah, i mean, look, they look very popular as well. it was one of the things that i think was making the hostages release look so traumatized. they looked stunned. they looked very worried. there's lots of people around them. we've all been in situations where there were noisy crowds around them. this must have been absolutely terrifying for them, people who have already been massively traumatized by what's happened to them on october 7th. and the conditions in which they've been kept over the past 49 days before they were released. some of them may not have even seen light. one of the things the israelis is telling us earlier is they have to give everybody eye tests to make sure their eyes had not deteriorated because they may have been deprived of light. >> this is just the beginning. we're expecting another list, if everything goes according to plan. is tomorrow going to look like what we saw today, where we were just watching with bated breath these different stops? >> i think the hope is it will go as it went today. when you think about it, the fact there was a pause in hostility today, the fact there was a release of the hostages, like the ones we just saw, the prisoners released from israeli jails, the delivery of aid, which is important as well, into gaza. i mean, that went remarkably well. there weren't really many hiccups in that. it played out. the hostages came out and they were alive. i think the hope is that can be repeated again and again and again. certainly we expect to see it in the next few days. the offer is there. if they can release more hostages, the israelis are willing to continue that pause. so, i think that's something that many people are aiming for. >> we'll wait to see what that looks like. matthew chance, thank you. great reporting today. of course tonight it's not just the families of the hostages that are rejoicing there. the families of those killed by hamas on october 7th, they're balancing the joy of seeing people now go free, now being reunited with their families, with also still processing the murder of their loved ones, still very fresh in their minds. one of those is tammy rahviv. her daughter and her daughter's boyfriend were murdered inside the home on october 7th. i want to thank you for joining me tonight given the circumstances. i can't imagine how hard it is to come on tell skprigs talk about this. i'm wondering what went through your mind as you were watching those people make it back home to israel today. >> thank you for having me. on one side, happy we're getting these kids and 30 people back and hopefully they all come back. but after the 7th of october, my feeling is i have a duty to tell what happened to my daughter and to make sure that the world doesn't forget that it happened on that day. >> i can promise you the world won't forget. can you tell us what happened to your daughter and her boyfriend? they had just been -- they'd only been living there for a few months, in moving into this kibbutz. but there was that day it happened. there was a phone call between you. can you just walk us through that? >> yeah. at 6:30 in the morning, we got a call, telephone call, that shooting from everywhere. she was terrified. she was under her bed. i didn't know what to do. i said stay under the bed, shut the door. and we didn't have any idea what was going on. around 10:00, her boyfriend said, please pray for us. and my husband got in the car and drove down to try to assist them, but he was stopped by policemen on the way. he told him the area became a war zone, and it was terrifying. we didn't know how to help. we knew she was in a terrible place with hundreds of thousands of hamas terrorists. and it was really unbearable fear. for three days we tried to assist them to get out of this -- we tried to send people to their place. and everyone told us that they cannot reach -- because the war is actually being on the home. so, we were hoping she's under the bed and managing to keep herself, both of them actually. and then on saturday, someone came to the house and said that there's no one there anymore. but we're hoping -- we were hoping that they were kidnapped. this is not something a normal mother would hope. but for three days, we also had some hope that they were still alive. but then on the 13th of october, we were told. four men came to our door and notified us that they were murdered. and they -- a few hours later, they notified her boyfriend the same, her boyfriend's parents, of course. and today we know it happened. we know their house was burned, and they had no choice but to try to escape through the window. there's actually a film that came out that someone managed to get of the situation. i didn't see it. but i was told what was seen. and she jumped out the window and he did. they were shot and killed on that morning, saturday. >> tami, i'm so sorry. and i know that days like today only revive that pain even more than it's already there. and i can promise you that everyone is keeping you in our thoughts, as you're processing this grief and just dealing with this unmanageable loss. and i'm so sorry. i just want to say thank you for joining me tonight to talk about it, and we're still thinking of you. tami raviv, thank you. >> thank you, thank you. i hope people do remember that day because it's a day that the world shouldn't ever forget. thank you for having me. >> absolutely. tami, thank you so much. of course there are so many families like tami's that are processing this today, seeing these hostages come home. the families of the hostages themselves are welcoming this in a bittersweet way. we'll talk about who those hostages are, who was in this first group, and why. we're also later hoping to speak with a friend of one of the hostages who was released today. what this moment means for them. that's after a quick break. you're watching a special edition of "the source" tonight. i'm kaitlan collins live on the ground here in tel aviv, as tonight 24 hostages who have lived through hell for seven weeks are now free and they are back home. but the majority of those who were taken on october 7th are not. they are still in gaza tonight, and that includes americans that we do believe are among those hostages. president biden spoke today after the successful release of this first group of hostages and said he is hopeful that at least some u.s. citizens will be included in the next group that's going to be released, which could be as soon as tomorrow. cnn's alex marquardt is tracking all of this from washington. alex, we heard from president biden, you know, the question is whether or not they have any indication of whether or not americans would actually be in this next group that we expect to be released on day two of this temporary agreement. >> well, kaitlan, if they do, they certainly aren't sharing it. and i think it's fair to say there was some disappointment today from the administration that none of these ten american hostages were released. i don't think there was necessarily an expectation because, as you know, hamas has been releasing the list of hostages to the israelis every night before the next day's release. and we understand that has happened again tonight. so, the question right now -- and this is one that we've been putting to the white house -- is whether they know if any americans are going to be released in this second wave tomorrow. now, we have not gotten a response back from the national security council or from the who was. what we have heard from president biden earlier today is that he is hoping and is expecting that the three americans who fall within this category of women and children, two women and young abigail edan, will come out in the next three days. of course this is a planned four-day pause, if everything goes according to plan. the administration is encouraged by what they have seen today. it's a good first step. president biden said earlier that has gone well so far. but of course they are waiting with bated breath to see these three americans get released by hamas. here's a little bit more of what he had to say. >> also remember all those who are still being held and renew our commitment to work for their release as well, two american women and one 4-year-old child, abigail, who remains among those missing. we also will not stop until we get these hostages brought home and an answer to their whereabouts. >> so, abigail edan, for these almost 50 days that she has been held by hamas in who knows what kind of awful conditions, she was just three years old. and then she turned four years old. today is her birthday. she will hopefully emerge from gaza in the next few days, at which point she will discover that her two parents were killed in the october 7th massacre. and one can only imagine how that news will be delivered and how she would receive it and how she will then grow up, of course, without those parents. but kaitlan, we are really trying to get a sense of what americans, if any, may be on this list that the israelis do have about who will be released tomorrow, kaitlan. >> everyone is just thinking about abigail's family. they just wanted her home on her birthday. alex, the other thing that stood out to me is president biden was speaking, he was asked, does he trust hamas. he said absolutely he doesn't. but he did sound hopeful about whether or not what is supposed to be this 96-hour truce in total could turn into something longer term. i mean, what's the anticipation among u.s. officials about whether or not that could actually happen? >> i think they really quite optimistic that it could extend beyond these 96 hours and we could see several more days of pause. this really is a quid pro quo, and that's the way it was designed. the biden administration has said there are incentives built into this deal. and essentially the more hostages that hamas releases, the longer the pause there is, the easier it will be for aid to get into gaza, the more palestinian prisoners will be released from israeli prisons. obviously those are -- you know, that's a real priority for hamas. the onus really is on hamas to come up with more hostages. they were clear that they were able to identify these 50 in this initial group, and they're going to be using these days of pauses to go out and try to identify more, find others who may be spread around elsewhere in the gaza strip, who may be with other groups, other factions, may be with gangs so they can release them. there really is an incentive for hamas to release more of these hostages. i thought that question about whether he trusts hamas was really interesting. he said, of course i don't trust hamas. he said hamas doesn't give a damn about the palestinian people. he said the only thing hamas responds to is pressure. it's interesting because that has been the israeli argument. israel was pressured in the beginning of this war to delay their effort, to delay their ground incursion, to give more time. but they thought that military pressure would get more hostages out. so, here he is making the israeli argument when in actual fact the deal that the u.s. actually helped in a major way to broker is really built on incentives and getting incentives to hamas so that they will release these more than 200 hostages, kaitlan. >> yeah. that's a good point. you hear that from israeli officials. they do believe that ground invasion going into gaza is what led them to this point. of course, you know, the question is the leverage that hamas continues to use with these hostages. alex marquardt, thank you. up next, children, their mothers, even their grandmothers, all being reunited with their families tonight. we have more on the hostages who are released today, their stories, what comes next for them right after a quick break. our special coverage continues. tonight, the president of the philippines confirming that 33-year-old filipino father of three was among those hostages released by hamas today. jimmy pacheco was the caretaker for -- on october 7th was murdered by hamas inside of his home, while jimmy, who was caring for him, was taken into gaza. tonight, for the first time, we are seeing the pictures of jimmy back in israel, being treated tonight at a hospital south of tel aviv. remarkable moments that you can see here. and joining me now is -- i just want to say, thank you for joining us tonight because i can't even imagine the whirlwind of emotions that have been happening for you and for your family today. what was -- how is jimmy doing, first up? what's his condition? what do you know about how he's doing? >> my brothers met with him. as far as i know, he's okay. i don't know, again -- i don't have any specific details. i know you can see in the picture that he's fine. he was talking to his wife tonight. so, again, better than expected, i would say. >> yeah. there's that picture. he's face timing with his wife and one of his daughters. and just having this chance, do you know if he's expected to be able to go home to see his family in the philippines? >> probably, yes. again, they're going to do some tests, medical tests and emotional tests and treatment. but, yes, most likely he will go to meet his family, i'm assuming. i didn't talk with him. >> what was your reaction when you found out that jimmy was going to be part of this group today that was getting released? >> so it actually came as a surprise because we knew that there were 13 being released, but they were all israelis with the israeli i.d. we knew there was some guys from thailand. we saw his picture in the videos this morning. and then among brothers, we talked about it. we verified with his wife later. so, we were very, very happy, obviously, to see, but it was a surprise to us. we didn't know. >> yeah. i think it was a surprise to everyone. and just -- i want everyone to know the relationship that your dad and jimmy had. i mean, that day on october 7th, when hamas came into the kibbutz, jimmy was with your dad. he was the one messaging with your sister, i believe, about what was going on and initially saying that they were okay, they were in the shelter. and then all of a sudden saying that the terrorists had broken into the home. >> yes. and both my brother and sister were in touch with him on whatsapp the morning of the attack. and my sister is in california and one of my brothers is in israel. both of them were chatting in whatsapp. at first, jimmy told everyone that they got to the safe room on time, even sent a picture of my father lying on the bed in the safe room watching tv. and my brother and sister asking to hold the door, obviously. later he sent another picture of a mess in the house and that he was afraid. and i think at some point we just -- they just couldn't hear any more replies to messages. at least on the whatsapp, that's how it ended. a few hours later, we got a message that he was able to send to one of his relatives that told us that my father was shot and that she was kidnapped. and a few hours later in the day, we saw a short video of him in gaza with his hands cuffed. >> the story, i mean, is just -- the fact this is someone who had worked with your dad for several years, there were all these photos that your sister had posted of the two of them together. you could just see the close relationship that they had. and now the fact that he's been released today, i mean, it must be a bittersweet moment for you, i imagine. >> it's a mix. again, we are very, very excited about the release. but obviously that's only the begin. we are part of kibbutz nir oz community, as you probably know. and in this community, there are many more still awaiting to be released. and we know all of them. i grew up in this kibbutz. i was there until i was 25. i know all the people who are either murdered or kidnapped. and this is just the beginning. we have to wait until each and every one of them will be released. that's how it should go. so, it's a mixed reaction. we are very excited, very happy for jimmy. but we are very much concerned about the rest of the group still there. >> i mean, 12 of the 13 that were released today, the israeli host