kayhan.ir

News ID: 134240
Publish Date : 01 December 2024 - 21:48
Thousands Flood Site of Assassination in Dahieh

With Nasrallah Until Last Breath!

BEIRUT (Dispatches) -- Thousands of people descended on the site where former Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah was martyred by an Israeli airstrike, after the Lebanese resistance group allowed access to the area for the first time for a public memorial.
The massive crater left by the terrorist attack was lit up in red and festooned with Hezbollah flags. At its centre, torches projected light beams into the night sky.
Men, women and children wept at the sight of the crater, while the crowd chanted “At your service, Nasrallah” – a common rallying cry among Hezbollah supporters.
Nasrallah led Hezbollah for more than 30 years as it became a formidable resistance force in Lebanon, turning him into one of the most influential figures in the Middle East.
A ceasefire deal agreed on Wednesday paved the way for the southern suburb where Nasrallah was assassinated, on 27 September, to be opened to journalists and the public.
Hezbollah had previously closely guarded access to the suburb, known as the Dahieh, particularly the place where Nasrallah was assassinated, which was entirely closed off.
The Israeli strike that martyred the Hezbollah leader was reportedly made up of as many as 80 bunker busting bombs, and it destroyed several residential buildings in Harek Hreik – the neighborhood that forms the centre of Hezbollah’s activities.
When the crowd was granted access to the site for the first time on Saturday night, people surged into the open area left by the destroyed buildings and climbed up around the edges of the crater.
Many held aloft candles and pictures of Nasrallah, who was 64, while a speech by the former leader played from a sound system.
“For these two and half months we have refused to believe that he is really gone,” said Narjis Khshaish, 31, who wept and clutched a candle.
“We have all just been waiting to reach this place to receive his blessings,” she said.
Moussa Dirani, 57, brought his teenage son to the memorial event. “It is very sad and painful to see this site,” he said. “But the resistance does not stop with Nasrallah, his death gives us power to continue along his path.”
The hundreds of Hezbollah flags at the event would “continue to fly high”, said Fida Nasreddine, 34. “We are with Hassan Nasrallah until the last breath,” she said.
Hezbollah started the war with Israel on October 8 last year, launching near-daily rocket and drone attacks at northern occupied territories and forcing some 60,000 illegal settlers to evacuate. The resistance group said it was doing so in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza where the Zionist regime is waging a campaign of genocide.  
Nasrallah’s assassination shocked Lebanon and the wider world when the news broke in September. 
However, the sense of celebration and prayer in Beirut “cannot be dismissed as insincere”, said David Wood, a Lebanon analyst with Crisis Group.
“The achievements that Hezbollah has promoted - maintaining its ground operations against Israel, ensuring that tens of thousands of Israelis couldn’t return to their homes, and having a severe impact on Israel’s economy, I don’t think those achievements are nothing, and I think lots of its supporters will see an element of victory in that.”
“Sayyed Hassan was everything to us. If only we had died and he was still alive,” said Lama, a 30-year-old woman who brought her two young children to the event.