In southern Lebanon, Israeli airstrikes intensify to over a hundred attacks in ten minutes, turning towns into rubble.
A cemetery in Haret Saida becomes an emergency morgue, receiving dozens of martyrs daily from villages under fire.
Workers prepare ten to fifteen fresh graves every morning, expecting more massacres before nightfall.
Displaced families arrive not only to bury their dead but also to receive condolences — because no other safe place remains.
A father finds his daughter's body by elimination: first he is told the female martyr is too old, then he discovers the truth.
A six-month-old girl's father is killed not by a direct strike, but while bringing bread to a village that had none for three days.
Sonic booms from Israeli warplanes try to scatter funeral processions, but the mourners do not flinch. Bodies are stored in marked graves with names and plaques, awaiting exhumation after the war for proper burial in home villages.
A martyr's handwritten message is found under the debris: "O God, help me against this powerful enemy that threatens my humanity."
The episode closes with a vow to recite the Qur'an all night, as the displaced insist they will return — but only with dignity, victory, or martyrdom.