kiryat shmona | The entire Gigi family was cleaning out Hamburger House, a small, fast-food restaurant along Kiryat Shmona’s main road.
Jars of condiments, cases of orange soda and stainless-steel pans lined the sidewalk as the family prepared for the restaurant’s reopening on Wednesday, Aug. 16. The business had been closed for a month.
Omri Gigi, 25, who opened the restaurant more than two years ago, hopes its reopening will herald better times in his hometown.
“It will be hard, but we have to keep going,” he said.
Kiryat Shmona, part of the partner region in northern Israel funded by the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation, was still largely empty Tuesday, Aug. 15, with only a handful of residents trickling back since a cease-fire was declared the day before in Israel’s war with Hezbollah.
Busloads of residents — some of them gone for an entire month — who took shelter in the center of the country were slowly making their way back to the city. There, they would have a chance to survey the damage — the shattered windows and crumpled ceiling of a ceramics shop, the gaping hole in the ceiling of one of the city’s main shopping malls.
Nurit Masiky, 43, got off a bus after almost three weeks of wandering between family and hotels, and could not stop smiling.
“I want to kiss the ground. This is what we have been waiting for,” she said, her two daughters by her side.
Across the road, a new, cream-colored house with red-shingled roof lay in disarray: A Katyusha rocket had crashed through the roof and second floor. Most of the shingles were scattered in the garden below. Exposed silver-colored roof beams reflected the harsh afternoon sun.
The family that lives there had yet to return. But a neighbor from an adjacent house, who returned Tuesday, Aug. 15, tried to grasp the new landscape of the city he has lived in since emigrating from Iraq in 1956.
“Kiryat Shmona has been destroyed,” said Yehuda Yehuda, 75, looking at the house and then to the nearby hills, where forest fires have destroyed what was a view of endless green.
Nearby, Shaked Perets, 23, sat in the ruins of her father’s ceramics shop that before the war sold bathtubs, tiles and building supplies. The store’s large showroom was empty; all the merchandise had been destroyed when the structure took a direct hit from a rocket.
“I think of all it took to build this business, and now it’s all destroyed and we’ll have to start again,” she said.
Perets wondered out loud if government compensation would come in full. She said she resents the government for giving partial payments at first, forcing people to pay out-of-pocket with money they don’t always have.
Sitting on a black leather couch, the one piece of furniture that remained unscathed, Perets said she felt numb. Not only were her father’s shop and her own apartment damaged, but she was grieving the death of a friend killed in Lebanon over the weekend, just before the cease-fire went into effect.
“This is just property,” she said, surveying the remains of the store. “Nothing compares to the lives taken.”
Outside the store, whose windows were blown out, a few drivers navigated down the street. Most businesses were still closed, some of them shuttered.