At Gate 10 of the arrivals corridor of the Bangkok airport, Wichayada Saeyang stroked her son’s hair, as if he had been a small boy, not a grown man. Just a few ft away, Pongsak Thanna wrapped his arms round his father and didn’t let go. His tears dampened his father’s shoulder.
“To see my son, it’s indescribable,” mentioned Vilas Thanna, Mr. Pongsak’s father. “I can’t say it in phrases.”
On Sunday morning, five hostages returned to Thailand after 15 months of captivity in Gaza. The household reunions on the airport had been a cheerful end result to an ordeal that has roiled a big group of Thai laborers because the Hamas-led assaults on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Regardless of having nothing to do with the battle, Thais had been, after Israelis, the most important victims of the fear that Hamas unleashed. At the least 39 Thai agricultural employees had been killed on Oct. 7. Greater than 30 had been taken hostage, with the bulk launched in November 2023. Two died throughout captivity; one ultimate Thai hostage stays unaccounted for.
“Immediately is a really emotional day,” mentioned Maris Sangiampongsa, Thailand’s international minister, who acquired the 5 hostages on the Bangkok airport, describing how great it was “for an individual to have the ability to come residence to the heat of their household.”
Poverty has compelled tens of hundreds of individuals from Thailand, significantly from the agricultural northeast, to seek out work in Israel as farmhands. Their numbers climbed within the Nineteen Nineties after the primary intifada, or rebellion, when farm homeowners had been on the lookout for replacements for Palestinian employees, and are actually round 30,000. About 5,000 of them labored the fields close to the border with Gaza, serving to to develop a lot of the recent produce eaten in Israel.
Salaries in Israel — for selecting avocados, elevating chickens, tending strawberries — are at the very least 5 instances that of these again residence in Isaan, because the northeast is understood. So transformative is the cash that hundreds of Thais stayed in Israel even after the Oct. 7 killings. Others have continued to journey there on new contracts.
Hazard continues to stalk them. In October, Hezbollah rockets killed 4 Thais in northern Israel. The identical month, one other Thai died close to the Israel-Lebanon border when ordnance exploded in an orchard.
For months, Mr. Vilas made pilgrimages to Buddhist temples, pleading for the protection of his son, Mr. Pongsak. He grew practiced on the ritual of prayer: the incense, the marigolds, the palms introduced collectively in supplication.
Simply earlier than midnight on Sunday, he boarded a van for the lengthy drive to Bangkok to reunite together with his son, arriving on the airport earlier than daybreak. His household couldn’t afford a aircraft ticket, he mentioned.
His son, he mentioned, would quickly be ordained as a monk to indicate his gratitude for survival.
“It felt like I died and I used to be reborn,” Mr. Pongsak mentioned of his captivity and launch.
On the Bangkok airport, Nukan Suwannakham, the mom of one other hostage, Sathian Suwannakham, marveled that even after 15 months of captivity her son appeared wholesome.
“He even appears fatter,” Ms. Nukan mentioned. “He has chubbier cheeks.”
Her son advised her that each one he did in captivity was “eat and sleep.”
The hostages survived totally on pita, beans and greens, they mentioned, together with just a little meat. The flavors had been far blander than the fiery delicacies of Isaan, with its chilies and fermented thrives. Months indoors left the hostages missing vitamin D, Thai diplomats mentioned.
Anong Saethao, the 22-year-old spouse of Bannawat Saethao, one other hostage, held her husband’s hand on the airport. She stroked his again. She nestled into his shoulder. They’ve three kids, ages 16 months, 4 and 6.
The youngsters knew solely that their father was working overseas, she mentioned. They had been too younger to know the reality about his 15 months as a hostage, longer than the time he had really labored as a farmhand in Israel.
Even when different Thai laborers have returned to Israel or are keen to take action, Ms. Anong mentioned her household was totally different. No cash is price such dangers.
“I’ll by no means enable him to work overseas once more,” she mentioned.