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After fleeing past Hezbollah fighting, some Israelis on northern border vow to stay

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 7, 2026

5 min read

· Last updated: April 8, 2026

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After fleeing past Hezbollah fighting, some Israelis on northern border vow to stay
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By Alexander Cornwell MANARA, Israel, April 7 (Reuters) - Orna Weinberg was forced to leave her home in northern Israel after it was struck by a Hezbollah rocket in October 2023, and spent the next

Israelis on Northern Border: Why Many Refuse to Leave Despite Hezbollah Threats

Life on the Northern Border: Stories of Resilience and Criticism

By Alexander Cornwell

Displacement and Return: The Story of Orna Weinberg

MANARA, Israel, April 7 (Reuters) - Orna Weinberg was forced to leave her home in northern Israel after it was struck by a Hezbollah rocket in October 2023, and spent the next two years displaced from her tight-knit community that is located just a few metres from the border with Lebanon.

Weinberg, 59, describes those years as "pretty tough" and marked by loss that went beyond the damage to her home. Many elderly residents died during the two years they were displaced, including her mother-in-law and her uncle.

"The day we had electricity, and we could put a mattress in, we got back, and we started fixing the house from inside out," she said.

Now, with northern Israel again facing rocket fire as Israeli troops battle Hezbollah in a spillover of the Iran war, Weinberg says she and other residents of the tiny kibbutz are staying put, having only returned in October of last year.

"We will never, ever leave this place again," Weinberg said.

Living Under Threat: Daily Realities in Manara

'THINGS HERE CAN BE MUCH BETTER FOR US'

Manara, a small kibbutz, was established by Jewish immigrants to British-controlled Mandatory Palestine in 1943, five years before the State of Israel was founded.

Lebanese villages are clearly visible from Manara's edge, underscoring its vulnerability to Hezbollah rocket fire. Israeli artillery fire into Lebanon frequently echoes in the distance.

Residents of Manara and other northern Israeli communities, home to hundreds of thousands of people, often have only a few seconds to reach bomb shelters when a rocket is launched from Lebanon, compared with several minutes in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem. Sometimes the warning comes only after a rocket has struck.

The repair work on Weinberg's home has been halted for now. It is not safe to continue. Nearby houses in the kibbutz are awaiting demolition, having been damaged by Hezbollah rockets during more than a year of fighting that erupted in parallel to the Gaza war. The Israel-Hezbollah fighting subsided following a 2024 ceasefire.

Hagoshrim: Another Kibbutz Facing the Threat

In another kibbutz, Hagoshrim, which sits about two kilometres from the Lebanese border, residents have also vowed to stay on despite the fear of deadly rocket fire. A neighbour was killed by Hezbollah rocket fire in 2024.

Hagoshrim resident Dror Gavish describes the threat from the Lebanese militant group as frightening. Two people in Israel have been killed in Hezbollah attacks since the group began firing rockets in support of Iran on March 2 this year.

Still, Gavish, 42, said he, his wife and three children preferred to stay rather than evacuate. "We are here and we're not going to go anywhere."

Government Response and Public Criticism

Evacuation Policies and Contrasts with Lebanon

SOME ISRAELIS CRITICIZE GOVERNMENT

As fighting rages, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government has insisted that no residents of the north will be forced to evacuate.

That is a stark difference from the other side of the border, where Israel has ordered hundreds of thousands of Lebanese to flee their homes as it bombs and razes some villages, accusing Hezbollah of using them to launch attacks. More than 1.2 million people have been displaced by Israel's renewed military offensive in Lebanon.

After Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel, Manara's residents fled, fearing Hezbollah could stage a similar assault. Tens of thousands of residents of Israel's north received government assistance to stay in temporary accommodation across the country, and many have yet to return.

This time around, Netanyahu's government has not offered to pay for residents to stay in hotels elsewhere in the country until the war dies down. Instead, officials have vowed to seize territory inside Lebanon to ensure Hezbollah cannot threaten northern Israeli communities with short-range fire.

Calls for Accountability and Hope for Change

Weinberg, the Manara resident, is critical of Netanyahu's government. Like many Israelis, she says there must be an investigation into the failures that led to the October 7 attack, which killed close to 1,200 people, including two of Weinberg's relatives. Another was abducted to Gaza and later killed, she said.

Netanyahu has rejected any personal responsibility for the failures and so far resisted an independent inquiry, instead backing an inquest in which the government would appoint half of its members.

"I don't think the government are our saviours, and I don’t expect them to be," Weinberg said. Israel's government should pursue peace with its neighbors rather than wage war, she said.

Gavish, of Hagoshrim, said that although he, like many Israelis, sees Iran as a serious threat, he does not trust Netanyahu's government to act in the country's best interests.

He hopes elections later this year will bring a new government focused on diplomacy, including peace with Lebanon.

"I really believe things here can be much better for us," he said.

(Reporting by Alexander Cornwell, Editing by Rami Ayyub & William Maclean)

Key Takeaways

  • Survivors like Orna Weinberg returned in October 2025 after two years of displacement and refuse to leave again despite security threats and halted repairs.
  • Since March 2, 2026, Hezbollah renewed rocket fire in support of Iran, prompting thousands of Israeli and Lebanese to flee—with over one million displaced in Lebanon and only minimal return incentives in Israel (yahoo.com).
  • Israeli government has declined evacuation orders for its northern citizens and has not offered new hotel stays or major support this round, contrasting with the extensive displacement and evacuation in southern Lebanon (apnews.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why were residents in northern Israel displaced in 2023?
Residents were forced to leave after Hezbollah rocket strikes damaged homes in communities near the border with Lebanon.
Have residents returned to their homes near the Lebanon border?
Yes, many residents like Orna Weinberg have returned and vow not to leave again despite ongoing threats.
What financial support has the Israeli government offered displaced residents?
While support was provided in 2023, the government has not offered to pay for temporary accommodation during recent escalations.
What is the current threat level for Israelis living near the Lebanon border?
There remains a significant risk from Hezbollah rocket fire, with warning times of only seconds for residents to reach shelters.
How have residents responded to government actions during the conflict?
Some residents, like Weinberg, have criticized the government and called for investigations into response failures.

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