One woman's home hit several times: 'Nothing to return to'

In the ghost town of Metula, over 60% of buildings have been destroyed by Hezbollah

David Azoulai, head of regional council, says city along border with Lebanon is ‘the most bombarded,’ and it will take years to repair damage: ‘It will not be easy, but we will’

An Israeli soldier stands in front of a house hit by Hezbollah rockets in the deserted northern Israeli town of Metula on November 4, 2024. (Menahem KAHANA / AFP)
An Israeli soldier stands in front of a house hit by Hezbollah rockets in the deserted northern Israeli town of Metula on November 4, 2024. (Menahem KAHANA / AFP)

From a bunker in Metula, a town in Israel’s bombarded north, David Azoulai showed off the remnants of burnt-out ordnances as if they were artifacts from a museum.

“The rockets are from the east… Iran, Russia and North Korea,” he said, handling the misshapen shrapnel of projectiles produced there.

But the shards — from anti-tank missiles, rockets and even parts of a sophisticated drone — were not precious antiquities, but artillery fired over the past year by Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Shiite terror group, from southern Lebanon.

They were seen by AFP journalists who went to the restricted zone as part of a press visit organized by the IDF.

Azoulai, the head of the regional council of Metula for the past decade, described his town as “the most bombarded” along Israel’s border with Lebanon.

He no longer sits in a regular office, but in the bunker that is part of the town’s wartime operations center.

Fires and smoke rise at houses in the northern border town of Metula after they were hit by Hezbollah shelling, as seen from the Lebanese town of Marjayoun, June 22, 2024. (AP/Hussein Malla)

Metula has been emptied of its 2,000 residents for more than a year — since Hezbollah began shelling Israel in October 2023, one day after the Hamas onslaught against southern Israel which sparked the ongoing war in Gaza.

Azoulai said he no longer manages regular municipal matters, but only those relating to the ongoing war, including civilian fatalities.

“Over the last year, we have done everything except take care of our citizens,” said Azoulai, explaining that Metula’s residents are now scattered nationwide.

Tensions have ramped up in recent weeks after Israeli ground troops entered southern Lebanon to battle Hezbollah fighters there in late September.

Israel said its goal is to remove the threats posed by the terror group and enable residents of northern Israel, including those from Metula, to return home. More than 60,000 people have been displaced from their homes in northern Israel since Hezbollah began firing rockets last year.

An Israeli soldier stands in front of a house hit by Hezbollah rockets in the deserted northern Israeli town of Metula on November 4, 2024. (Menahem KAHANA / AFP)

At least 103 people have been killed on the Israeli side, including 41 civilians, in cross-border skirmishes and in the ensuing ground operation, according to official Israeli figures.

More than 3,130 people have been killed in Lebanon since Hezbollah began attacking Israel, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, most of them since September 23, a figure that is thought to include civilians and combatants but is likely not complete. Hezbollah stopped consistently updating the number of its members killed since Israel began responding more forcefully in September 2024. The IDF estimates that some 3,000 Hezbollah operatives have been killed over the past year.

Azoulai and other residents who spoke to AFP said that returning would be a lengthy process, up to four years of rehabilitation in a town where he said more than 350 — or some 60 percent — of homes and other municipal buildings have been totally destroyed by the Hezbollah strikes.

Galit Yosef was evacuated from her home — which sits at the peak of the hillside town — on October 16 last year and has returned only a few times.

“There is nothing to return to,” said the 60-year-old who previously worked for the municipality. “My home was hit several times” by anti-tank missiles and other artillery “and in the end it caught on fire,” she explained.

Yosef has been living in Tiberias, in the hotel where she was evacuated to, and has watched as family, friends and neighbors from Metula have slowly relocated elsewhere.

“We can’t make any plans to go back right now,” she said, adding that “every day another house is hit and another and another.”

After more than a year without civilian life, Metula has an eeriness to it, with many homes damaged by rocket fire, roads and sidewalks pockmarked by shrapnel and abandoned vehicles charred and burnt.

A picture taken during a media tour organized by the Alma Research and Education Centre shows a a heavily damaged house in the deserted northern Israeli town of Metula, near the border with Lebanon, on March 19, 2024. (Jalaa Marey/AFP)

At least two homes seen by AFP were completely destroyed, their roofs blown out by a missile, their walls stained black from fire.

Metula resident Aviv — identified only by his first name as he is part of the local security team — said that even if the army wrapped up the war in Lebanon and the government permitted, returning home for some would “take time.”

For many like Aviv, who has been living in the town for most of the past year assisting Azoulai and the army with the security arrangements, the war has taken its toll. A rocket fired from Lebanon killed a farmer and his team of four foreign agricultural workers just a few days earlier.

“I was the first to arrive at the scene and it is something that I just cannot describe,” Aviv said of the deaths.

Azoulai insisted that residents will only return if there is complete security.

“I don’t hear the government saying that we can return but as soon they do, we will decide if it is safe,” he said. “It will not be easy to rehabilitate Metula, but we will rehabilitate it.”

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