With Joy and Tears, Lebanese Return Home: ‘Look at All the Destruction’

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A cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah allowed those displaced by the war to return to their homes. Many found buildings cleaved in half, crushed cars and ruined towns.

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Roads were packed with cars as people displaced from southern and eastern Lebanon began returning to their homes after a cease-fire deal between Israel and Hezbollah.CreditCredit…Daniel Berehulak/The New York Times

Ben HubbardChristina Goldbaum

As day broke on the newly established cease-fire between Hezbollah and Israel on Wednesday, Hussein Nassour returned to his Beirut neighborhood to inspect the ruins of his former life.

Israeli airstrikes had blown out the doors and windows of his apartment, ruining his furniture. His family’s market was destroyed, along with the nearby buildings where his customers used to live.

He failed to see how the war had done anyone any good.

“We did not win. We lost,” he said. “No one gained anything from any of this.”

Across Lebanon, people greeted the cease-fire that ended the country’s deadliest war in three decades with profound relief, hoping that both sides would stick to it and allow some sense of normalcy to return.

For many of the hundreds of thousands of displaced people who had fled Israel’s airstrikes and ground invasion, it provided a chance to return home and take stock of what they had lost.

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A man in a winter jacket looking at the rubble and remains of a destroyed building.
A resident of Dahiya surveying the destruction in the aftermath of the cease-fire announcement on Wednesday.Credit…Diego Ibarra Sanchez for The New York Times

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