Essayer OR - Gratuit
Return to ruins and uncertainty, despite ceasefire
The Guardian Weekly
|December 06, 2024
Mohammed Bzeeh spent the first hours of the ceasefire cleaning. After the Hezbollah-Israel agreement last Wednesday appeared to have brought 13 months of fighting to a close, Bzeeh and his family found their home in the village of ZibqeenZibqin ruined by an Israeli airstrike.
Bzeeh set to work, the wiry 18-year-old hefting concrete and metal scrap off his driveway using a rusty shovel. His family watched on, overlooking the street they had left two months earlier, now lined by the burnt-out husks of their neighbours' homes.
"I feel overwhelmed. We came back to our land, our motherland, and there is so much damage here. But we will resist and stay here and fix our homes," Bzeeh said.
He was not alone. His neighbours were already picking through the remains of their properties, hoping to find some heirlooms amid the rubble. In the days that followed, hundreds of thousands of residents of south Lebanon joined them and a steady stream of cars backed up the highway for days.
Most arrived to find similar scenes of destruction. There was no water, electricity or mobile phone service south of the Litani river, two months after Israel started its intensified aerial campaign and ground invasion of south Lebanon at the end of September. By the day of the ceasefire, nearly 4,000 people had been killed in Lebanon, more than a million displaced and dozens of villages had been rendered uninhabitable.
Despite the massive damage to their homes and death toll among their communities, many in south Lebanon viewed their very presence as a victory and a form of resistance.
"Obviously, we are happy because we returned back here and we won the war. If you destroy all of our houses, we will stay here and we will resist because we are the [owners] of the land," Bzeeh said.

Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 06, 2024 de The Guardian Weekly.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
Heaven made
With a towering new album about female saints in 13 languages, Rosalía is pop's boldest star-and one of its most controversial
6 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
How Milei's 'chainsaw' cuts have hit the most vulnerable
Argentinians are used to the large rubbish containers in Buenos Aires.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
"The Peace Corps volunteers were just doing small things. Not what really needed to be done'"
On school holidays, when he went back to his village, David began to notice unwashed young Americans hanging out with his friends and family.
10 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Bumpy ride
Epic western with a brilliant plot is let down by having one eye on literary immortality
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Smash it up: finding new ways to use up excess lasagne sheets
I've accidentally bought too many boxes of dried lasagne sheets. How can I use them up? Jemma, by email
2 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
The best way to end this '6-7' obsession? Adults get on board
Don't tell your kids, but “6-7” is Dictionary.com’s “word of the year” for 2025.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Net zero gains A Cop30 minus Trump is better than one with a US wrecking ball
For years, countries around the world pressed the US to engage with them in addressing the climate crisis and to show it was serious about taking action.
2 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
'Matt's too sexy for my show'
As his scandalous novel The Death of Bunny Munro lands on our screens, Nick Cave and the show's star Matt Smith discuss Kylie, bad dads and child actors
5 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
When the president is groped in public, women know who to blame
'Machismo in Mexico is so fucked up not even the president is safe,\" said Caterina Camastra, a professor and feminist, when I talked to her in Morelia, a city west of the Mexican capital last week.
3 mins
November 14, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Zohran Mamdani built the greatest field operation by any political campaign in New York's history-by getting citizens to talk to each other.Can Democrats learn from his success? 'Unstoppable force' that drove victory
A WEEK BEFORE ZOHRAN MAMDANI'S convention-shattering victory in the New York City mayoral election, members of his vast army of youthful volunteers were amply aware of what was at stake.
8 mins
November 14, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

