海角大神

In Israel-Hezbollah war, a rising cry from Lebanese: Why were we bombed?

Lebanese Shiites bury the dead from an Israeli airstrike that leveled a house, killing 10 members of the family inside, north of Beirut in Maaysra, Lebanon, Oct. 14, 2024.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神

October 29, 2024

High in the forest-scented hills of the Mount Lebanon range, mourners carry 10 coffins draped in Lebanese flags out of the local mosque, one after the other, for a public ceremony before they are buried.

The funeral banner features a typical mix of Lebanese faces, making up three generations of a Shiite Muslim family that lived for decades in this predominantly 海角大神 area north of Beirut.

One man was a teacher, another a municipal engineer; one boy wears a scout uniform. The women are all pictured wearing headscarves, from the beaming matriarch to a young student with a bright, ready-for-the-future smile.

Why We Wrote This

Lebanon is all too familiar with the heavy cost civilians bear in war, including internal conflicts. Now, once again, as Israel pursues Hezbollah, people are dying or displaced from their homes, caught in the crossfire of a war that is not theirs.

All were killed by an Israeli airstrike that had flattened their home two days earlier, on Oct. 12, leaving the community in shock and raising questions that echo increasingly across Lebanon as Israel prosecutes its military campaign against Hezbollah.

Why this target? Why so many civilian casualties, especially children?

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The family has no apparent formal connection to Hezbollah, other than general support for the Iran-backed Lebanese militia. But one coffin is loosely draped with two yellow Hezbollah flags, and the funeral turns into a pro-Hezbollah event, featuring heartfelt chants of loyalty to Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah chief assassinated by Israel in late September.

Two days after the Israeli strike, banners that read 鈥淢ade in USA,鈥 with an image of the Statue of Liberty screaming, have been strung up across the wreckage. As is typical in Lebanon, grief over citizens lost in conflict is inseparable from politics, and so-called 鈥渞esistance鈥 to Israel.

Lebanese fire fighters, first responders, and security forces cope with the aftermath of Israeli airstrikes in a crowded central district of Beirut, Oct. 11, 2024. Lebanese officials said at least 22 people were killed and over 100 wounded in an attack that Israel said targeted a high-ranking Hezbollah official.
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鈥淲e gave a promise to ourselves [that] we will not bring any weapons to this place, and we don鈥檛 have any military bases and armed people 鈥撀燼nd they [Israelis] know that,鈥 Sheikh Mohammed Amro, the white-turbaned Hezbollah chief for Mount Lebanon and the north, tells mourners. 鈥淚n spite of all that, why are the children killed? Most Lebanese people ask that: What did they do?鈥

The sheikh was the purported target of an Israeli strike Sept. 25 in Maaysra, which destroyed a house and killed three residents.

鈥淏elieve us, the history of the new Middle East will be written by these martyrs 鈥撀爓e promise that,鈥 says Sheikh Amro.

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A million people on the move

From every corner of Lebanon, people are reeling from the scale, the intensity, and the ever-growing death toll and destruction 鈥 estimates reach as high as $25 billion 鈥 of Israel鈥檚 relentless air campaign, and more recent ground incursion, to decapitate and dismantle Hezbollah.

Hezbollah joined the war against Israel, firing rockets and shells into northern Israel to create what it calls a 鈥渟upport front鈥 for Hamas, a day after the Palestinian militant group鈥檚 Oct. 7, 2023, assault on Israel.

One year on, 2,710 people have been killed and more than 12,590 wounded in Lebanon, according to Lebanon鈥檚 Ministry of Health. The figure does not differentiate between combatants and civilians. The Israeli military estimates more than 2,000 Hezbollah fighters have been killed in that time.

Lebanon鈥檚 hospitals have been overwhelmed, scores of medical facilities have been closed, and first responders have been killed. The government calculates that it needs $350 million each month to provide basic food, water, and sanitation to the 1.3 million people who have fled their homes 鈥 20% of Lebanon鈥檚 population.

Lebanese civilians try to cope with the war's devastation and their displacement, in Beirut's central Hamra district, Oct. 15, 2024.
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Among the civilian casualties was Selena al-Smarah, a 6-year-old girl killed along with her parents when Israel struck her family鈥檚 home in the southern coastal city of Tyre in late September.

Selena and her sister Celine, age 10, who was wounded in the attack, had for many months attended arts workshops run by the Tiro Association for Arts, which converts abandoned cinemas into arts centers. During the war it has run聽programs for displaced children in Tyre and the northern city of Tripoli.

The impact of Selena鈥檚 death could not be more acute for Kassem Istanbouli, director of the Tiro Association, whose eyes well up with tears at her memory. He shows a photograph he took on his phone of a smiling Selena, just a day before her death, holding up a picture of a flower with just two petals colored in.

鈥淪he didn鈥檛 finish her last drawing,鈥 says Mr. Istanbouli, clearly heartbroken, his usually unbridled positive energy dimmed.

鈥淭his family, they are very nice, a poor family selling food by the cinema to stay alive,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 cried very much. I see Selena like my daughter. I don鈥檛 understand. It鈥檚 a big shock.鈥

A joint recipient last year of the UNESCO-Sharjah Prize for Arab Culture, Mr. Istanbouli attracted praise for his work from United Nations Secretary-General Ant贸nio Guterres when he visited Tyre in 2021.

Lebanese decry widespread bombing

Israel launched a new wave of airstrikes on Tyre last week, saying it was targeting Hezbollah command-and-control centers. The refurbished cinema where Tiro worked was already closed, because of its proximity to the strike that killed Selena.

鈥淎t the beginning it was like a shelter. There were many people and activities, but people feel sad; they feel afraid, especially after these bombs,鈥 says Mr. Istanbouli.

Amid his work preparing a shelter in Beirut, Lebanese actor-director Kassem Istanbouli holds up his phone with the last picture he has of Selena al-Smarah, a 6-year-old girl who took part in his arts workshops. She was killed the day after this photo was taken, in a late-September Israeli airstrike in Tyre, Lebanon, Oct. 15, 2024.
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神

Many families Tiro worked with in Tyre have moved north to Tripoli for their safety. Mr. Istanbouli is now in central Beirut, renovating a long disused cinema that Tiro is racing to fix up to shelter displaced people.

The air thick with the smells of fresh plaster and paint, a dozen mattresses are laid out on the balcony, each with a blanket and a pillow. Among the first to arrive is a headscarfed mother with teenage sons from Tyre, whose house was destroyed in an Israeli strike.

鈥淭hank God we are away from there. We can鈥檛 sleep in Tyre,鈥 says the matriarch, who gives the name Umm Abdullah and expresses gratitude for the roof and the tins of rice they received upon arrival.

Across Beirut, in the 海角大神 district of Achrafieh, other survivors of Israeli airstrikes are heavily bandaged as they recover from severe burns at the Lebanese Geitaoui Hospital.

The only specialized burns unit in the country normally treats around 100 cases each year, says Dr. Pierre Yared, the hospital鈥檚 co-director.

鈥淲hen we received 30 cases in a week, it was a big deal 鈥 we had to create a new unit鈥 for patients who often require many weeks to recover, says Dr. Yared. The scale of casualties today is four to five times higher than during the last Hezbollah-Israel battle, in 2006, he says.

Mattresses and bedding line the balcony, as Lebanese actor-director Kassem Istanbouli and his Tiro Association for Arts work to refurbish a disused central Beirut theater to house people displaced by a month of stepped-up Israeli bombing against Shiite regions, Oct. 15, 2024.
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神

In one bed, Ronald Antoine Karam, a middle-aged 海角大神 food salesperson, is recovering from multiple burns. He says he was walking to his car in his village near Baalbek 鈥撀燼 Hezbollah stronghold in eastern Lebanon 鈥 when Israel struck nearby.

鈥淚 lost my car. I lost my job. I lost my health 鈥 who is going to pay for that?鈥 he asks. 鈥淭he Israelis don鈥檛 ask, 鈥榃ho are you?鈥 They shoot all the people. People are suffering there.鈥

In another room is 11-year-old Mohammed Ibrahim, his face bandaged after an airstrike brought down his six-story building east of the coastal city of Sidon. The strike left 71 people dead, including his father and brother; his mother was injured. To shield him from the anguish of those losses, the sixth grader has still not been told of them.

Back in the cinema, Mr. Istanbouli decries the conflict鈥檚 civilian casualties.

鈥淲hat is the reason? They are normal people. This is criminal for humanity,鈥 he says, adding that death of little Selena motivates him to tell her story through art 鈥渆verywhere in the world.鈥

鈥淪he gives us a lot of energy for the future, to speak about her and all the children,鈥 says Mr. Istanbouli. 鈥淲e will not stop.鈥