KIRYAT SHMONA, Israel (Reuters) - Shattered glass still litters much of Vilen Gizunterman's dark apartment weeks after a Hizbollah rocket blew out his windows and destroyed two of his neighbors' homes.
Like many others in this Israeli border town, the 78-year-old immigrant from Ukraine is still waiting for repairs to be carried out. Kiryat Shmona bore the brunt of rocket attacks during the month-long war between Israel and Hizbollah.
"I thought the tragedy of my life was when my father died in World War II," the Nazi Holocaust survivor said. "Imagine if I had been here, I would have been cut to shreds. When a rocket strikes your house, that's trouble."
Hizbollah fired nearly 1,000 rockets into Kiryat Shmona, wrecking or damaging some 2,500 homes, schools and businesses in the low-income town. In all, the guerrillas fired 4,000 missiles across northern Israel before a truce took effect on August 14.
Reuters