Thousands of visitors in Israel have been flocking weekly to the site of the Supernova music festival, to pay their respects to the 364 people killed there by Hamas in the October 7 attacks.
Visitors disembark from a constant flow of buses and cars on the edge of fields and forests in the south of Israel, just a few kilometres (miles) away from the Gaza Strip.
Nearly five months ago, some 3,000 festival-goers were at this spot preparing to enjoy a two-day techno party under the desert sky.
Visitors arriving now in a nearby parking lot are met with a giant mosaic of photos of victims killed in the attack, bearing the slogan: "We will remember you for eternity."
The Supernova festival saw the highest death toll by far when Hamas militants broke through from Gaza in an unprecedented attack, which resulted in the deaths of more than 1,160 people.
Some 250 people -- among them 40 festival-goers -- were taken hostage. A total of 130 remain in Gaza, including 31 presumed dead, according to Israel.
In response to the attack, Israel launched a military campaign that has killed at least 29,954 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Palestinian territory's health ministry.
In the field at the Supernova site, one tree has been planted for each victim in remembrance, their frail stems supported by stakes.
What was barren ground in October has turned green, dotted with red anemones.
A visiting group of uniformed soldiers -- some just returning after fighting in the Gaza Strip -- sang the Hatikva, the Israeli national anthem.
They were joined by a group of women from Mexico, among them Jacqueline Sefami, a member of a pro-Israel organisation, who said "I can't stop crying".
While they visited the site, explosions were ringing out in the distance in Gaza, where Israel is battling Hamas.
Elazar Goldstein, 42, an army reservist, had just completed a tour of duty in Gaza.
Walking in the field, holding hands with his wife, he said "nothing justifies war more than this".
- 'Connect to this history' -
Other trees have been planted at the site with photos attached of those killed or taken hostage at the festival.
The site is decorated with Israeli flags, candles, wreaths of flowers and other objects symbolising those lost, including several guitars.
The majority of visitors are Israelis, like the group led by Frederic Coscas, a tour guide from Netanya in central Israel, who recounted details of the attack to a group of around 20 people.
He said he was shaken when he saw "the photos of all these young people who were just asking to live".
"It's therapy for me to come here," said Coscas, whose daughter was at the festival and narrowly escaped the attack.
More than 40 sites were attacked by Hamas, including military bases, villages and kibbutzim.
After October 7, official delegations streamed in to pay their respects in the communities.
But their inhabitants, seeking peace and quiet, finally demanded an end to visits.
As well as the Supernova site, delegations also continue to visit the city of Ofakim -- the place furthest into Israel that was attacked, some 25 kilometres (16 miles) from Gaza.
About 40 police and civilians were killed in Ofakim.
A group of girls from a Jerusalem religious seminary listen with tears in their eyes to the story of Shiran, the 37-year-old widow of Roni Abuharon, a policeman killed by Hamas.
"I am proud of him," she said in front of Abuharon's portrait in the spot where he was killed, in an area still riddled with bullet holes.
"I want to tell his story so that we understand that the Jewish people are alive and will win."
Yaffa Moskowitz, education manager at the seminary, said "it's important to show our students what happened here, so they can connect to this history".
At the Supernova site, Goldstein, the reservist, said he is confident about the future.
"I was here on (October) 8, I saw the bodies, and today I see all this green and all the people who come to walk here in complete safety," he said.
"I'm optimistic, but it's a long process."
Israeli concert memorial site honors those killed, kidnapped on Oct. 7
Israelis and foreign visitors are flocking to a memorial at the site of last October's Nova music festival in Re'im, where hundreds of concertgoers were killed or kidnapped by Hamas-led militants.
People gathered there Tuesday as negotiations for a cease-fire and hostage release remain ongoing and possibly could conclude within the week, according comments made by President Joe Biden on Monday.
The concert site, which is in Israel's Negev Desert near the border with the Gaza Strip, displays photographs on posts and flowers, along with the personal items of the 325 Israelis killed and those taken hostage by Hamas terrorists on Oct. 7.
"This was not only a massacre of people," said Asher Swissa, a DJ who played music at a memorial in December. "It was a massacre of music, of freedom, of something much more bigger than us."
According to Swissa, Israel is known for its rave events. The Nova rave party has been held every year at different venues throughout Israel and includes what is called psytrance or psychedelic trance music.
"This is the 9/11 of Israel," said Joss Aviv, one of the event's organizers. "Everything is compromised."
In all, Hamas killed 1,200 people and took more than 240 hostages, according to Israeli authorities. Since Oct. 7 and Israel's war in Gaza, nearly 30,000 have been killed in the Palestinian territory, according to Gaza's Ministry of Health.
On Monday, Biden told reporters that an Israel-Hamas cease-fire is "close," saying he hopes to see a halt in fighting "by next Monday."
U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday that negotiators meeting in Paris have agreed to the basics of a deal that would release the remaining Israeli hostages in exchange for a cease-fire.
"We would like to see this deal get done," Sullivan said. "We would like to see the hostages returned, including American hostages."
Israel Gaza: Biden hopes for ceasefire by next week
US President Joe Biden says he hopes to have a ceasefire in the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza by Monday.
His comments come amid reports of some progress in indirect negotiations involving Israeli and Hamas officials.
It would involve aid deliveries to Gaza and the release of more hostages taken during the 7 October Hamas attacks.
Israel has not commented and Hamas officials have indicated the two sides are not as close to a ceasefire deal as Mr Biden suggested.
Qatar, which has been mediating in the talks alongside Egypt, said there was no deal to announce yet.
The Qatari foreign ministry spokesman, Majed al-Ansari, said Doha was "going to push for a pause before the beginning of Ramadan" and felt "hopeful, not necessarily optimistic".
Israel launched a large-scale air and ground campaign in Gaza after Hamas gunmen killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel.
The attackers also took 253 people hostage, a number of whom have since been released.
The Hamas-run health ministry in the Gaza Strip says at least 29,878 people have been killed in the territory since then - including 96 deaths in the past 24 hours - in addition to 70,215 who have been wounded.
According to Reuters news agency, quoting an unnamed source close to the talks, Hamas is still studying a draft framework, drawn by France, which would include a 40-day pause in all military operations and the exchange of Palestinians held in Israeli jails for Israeli hostages, at a ratio of 10 to one.
"We're close," President Biden told reporters in New York on Monday. "We're not done yet. My hope is by next Monday we'll have a ceasefire."
On NBC's "Late Night With Seth Meyers" which was broadcast later, the president said Israel would be willing to pause its assault during Ramadan if a deal was reached.
The Islamic holy month begins around 10 March.
"Ramadan's coming up and there has been an agreement by the Israelis that they would not engage in activities during Ramadan as well, in order to give us time to get all the hostages out," Mr Biden said.
On Tuesday, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said that "talks continue" but that "ultimately, some of this comes down to Hamas" to agree.
"We'd certainly welcome one by this weekend...we are trying to push this deal over the finish line," Mr Miller added, although he declined to comment further on the negotiations or possible timing. "We think it's possible."
However, a Hamas official told the BBC earlier: "The priority for us in Hamas is not the exchange of detainees, but the cessation of the war.
"It is not logical, after all this loss of life and property, to accept any offer that does not lead to a complete ceasefire, the return of the displaced, and the reconstruction of Gaza."
Last week, the US - Israel's main ally - was widely criticised for vetoing a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. Instead, it proposed its own resolution for a temporary ceasefire "as soon as practicable", which also warned Israel not to invade the southern Gazan city of Rafah "under current circumstances".
Israel has faced mounting international pressure not to launch an offensive in Rafah, where about 1.5m Palestinians are sheltering, most having fled fighting further north in the territory.
"There are too many innocent people that are being killed," Mr Biden said on Late Night With Seth Meyers. "And Israel has slowed down the attacks in Rafah. They have to. And they've made a commitment to me they're going to see to it that there is ability to evacuate significant portions of Rafah before they go and take out the remainder of Hamas."
On Sunday, the Israeli prime minister's office said it had received plans from its military to evacuate civilians from areas including Rafah.
Mr Netanyahu said in an interview with CBS on Sunday that Israeli forces would eventually launch an invasion of Rafah regardless of any agreement for a temporary ceasefire, insisting: "We can't leave the last Hamas stronghold without taking care of it."
"If we have a deal, it'll be delayed somewhat," he added. "But it'll happen. If we don't have a deal, we'll do it anyway."
In a separate development on Monday, Palestinian Authority (PA) Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh resigned along with his government, which runs parts of the occupied West Bank.
President Mahmoud Abbas accepted his decision, which could pave the way for a technocratic government.
Mr Abbas is under pressure from the US to reform the PA so it can govern Gaza after the Israel-Hamas war ends.
Last week, Mr Netanyahu presented a vision for the territory that made no mention of any role for the PA.