The Toronto International Film Festival announced on Thursday night that the documentary “The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue” will return to its official screening list.
The film depicts the actions of retired Major General Noam Tibon, who during the October 7 massacre, rescued his family from Kibbutz Nahal Oz, also saving a couple fleeing the Nova party, and evacuating wounded soldiers under fire. It focuses on a personal tale of heroism amid one of the most difficult days in Israel’s history.

In a joint statement by the festival’s management and the film’s creator, Barry Avrich, posted on X, it was announced that after discussions over the past day, a solution was found that would allow the film to be screened. “We heard the public’s pain and are grateful for the support,” the statement read.
עוד באותו הנושא
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- Israel Strengthens Global Alliances Amid Regional and International Challenges
- Beyond the Conventional: Haredi Soldiers and Wives of Warriors Stand with the IDF
The film had previously been removed due to security concerns and “problems with filming rights approval”, outrageously claiming the footage from the October terrorists’ own cameras did not have proper permissions. Members of the Jewish community in Canada claimed that the decision was influenced by pressure from anti-Israel elements.
The Right Call
Toronto City Council member Brad Bradford responded on X to the festival’s decision to reinstate the film, saying it was “the right call,” but added that “this should never have happened, and public pressure should not have been necessary to reverse the decision.”
Bradford called on the festival’s leadership to publicly apologize to the filmmaker Barry Avrich and conduct “serious soul-searching.”
I have learned that TIFF has reversed its decision and will screen ‘The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue’.
This is the right call. But this never should have happened – and it shouldn’t have taken a public outcry to reverse this mistake.
TIFF owes Barry Avrich a public… pic.twitter.com/dIBd09OW8Z
— Brad Bradford✌️ (@BradMBradford) August 14, 2025
The film will be the only Israeli film to appear at the festival.
Justice Prevailed
Israel Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar welcomed the announcement from the Toronto Film Festival.
“Justice has prevailed. This decision sends a clear message to massacre deniers and antisemitic elements who seek to erase the atrocities committed by Hamas terrorists against Israeli civilians,” he wrote.
Sa’ar thanked the Israeli Embassy in Ottawa, the Consulate in Toronto, the Jewish community in Canada, cultural figures, and many others who worked to return the film to the program.





