According to the IDF, from one barrage of rockets fired by Hezbollah this week, eight rockets landed inside of Lebanon.
The sense of a ghost town, made more intense by low-hanging clouds and a bit of rain, fills out this area; from Arab al-Aramshe to Shtula and toward Mattat.
Soon after the Hezbollah attack, the IDF struck the source of the fire, as well as several Hezbollah terror positions across the border.
In 2021, workers were alarmed to discover that shelters had been turned into warehouses, filled with garbage, or exploited as a place to use drugs.
The rocket comes amid tensions on Hezbollah posts in Israeli territory and a new fence around a village split by the Blue Line.
IFCJ made another large donation recently, doubling the number of shelters in Tiberius and adding 10 more in the Maale Yosef region of Western Galilee.
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant announced on Saturday night that the West Bank closure would be extended until the end of the Passover holiday and that all Ramadan leniencies would be cancelled.
In many ways, this looks like an Iranian script that was prepared with Hamas and with Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah.
The Lebanon rockets seem to show the limitation of the deal signed last year in which peace, security and stability were supposed to be some of the benefits.
While neither may be directly responsible for the rocket attacks, Hezbollah controls southern Lebanon and attacks from there are linked to the wider threat in the North.