Protesters in Tel Aviv have called for an end to the war in Gaza and the return of Israeli hostages
Speaking in Hostages Square, a protester said too much time has passed since the hostages were taken.
"They have to bring them home," she said.
"I can't believe it's been two years, and they are not here yet."
Meanwhile, a Palestinian man in the square said both sides in the conflict are "fed up".
He said he has been thinking about the "new generation, the children watching the images coming from Gaza, watching what's happening here".
A second woman said they "don't appreciate the government".
"We don't like how they deal with this," she said.
The coming 48 hours is likely to be pivotal when it comes to ending the war in Gaza after Hamas agreed to accept elements of the ceasefire deal put forward by US President Donald Trump.
The group has agreed to release all Israeli hostages and transfer governance of Gaza to an independent Palestinian technocratic body.
However, Mr Trump said that Hamas must move quickly on his plan for ending the war in Gaza, "or else all bets will be off".
He also expressed appreciation that "Israel has temporarily stopped the bombing in order to give the Hostage release and Peace Deal a chance to be completed," although the enclave's civil defense agency said Israel carried out dozens of attacks on Gaza City overnight.
The plan outlined by Mr Trump earlier this week proposes an immediate halt to fighting and the release of all Israeli hostages, both living and dead, within 72 hours in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.
The agreement to release all hostages will give families in Israel hope after a long campaign to secure their release.
The Hamas statement is significant, but despite signs of progress obstacles still remain.
The group has made no commitment to disarm at this point, a demand by Israel and the US that it has previously rejected.
Hamas said the aspects of the proposal touching on the future of Gaza and Palestinian rights, should be decided with other factions and based on international law.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced intense domestic criticism with families of the hostages protesting for their return and the economic toll of the long running war.
But on the other hand, the PM's right wing coalition partners are reluctant to agree to any ceasefire deal without guarantees of demilitarisation by Hamas.
The US President will be keen to deliver on pledges to end the war and return dozens of hostages ahead of the second anniversary of the Hamas attacks on Tuesday.
Gaza's Health ministry says over 66,000 Palestinians have been killed since the conflict began.
There is a real opening for peace now driven by the humanitarian catastrophe within Gaza, but without compromises on weapons this could only be a brief pause in a long running and painful conflict.
Read more: Gazans hope Trump will force end to two-year-old war